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Re: Azimuth method for position
From: Bill Lionheart
Date: 2017 Oct 20, 17:49 +0100
From: Bill Lionheart
Date: 2017 Oct 20, 17:49 +0100
It seems to me that the problem of measuring azimuth at sea is two fold. First is that even a corrected magnetic compass is only accurate to about one degree. Second is devising a sufficiently accurate instrument to measure the difference in azimuth between stars. If you can solve the second problem you could devise a least squares solution to the problem of fitting the difference in azimuths, and indeed of one star was Polaris this would be more or less the same as having the absolute azimuth. But to measure the azimuth one still needs a horizontal reference of some kind. The question then is if you can get away with a less accurate horizontal reference than needed to measure altitudes to one minute. There is a lot more to this problem that just solving the equations with Newton's method on a computer! On 20 October 2017 at 15:28, Herman Dekkerwrote: > Hello Francis, > > How does your "specially adapted Az compass " looks like? I have found a > compass that is usable till about H=60°. Above that height it is a guess > every time. > > Regards, > > HermanD > > -- Professor of Applied Mathematics University of Manchester http://www.maths.manchester.ac.uk/bl