NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Digital Image CN Exercise #2
From: Marcel Tschudin
Date: 2010 Apr 8, 21:55 +0300
From: Marcel Tschudin
Date: 2010 Apr 8, 21:55 +0300
Greg, Just a few notes regarding your last posting: The photo which I attached was a copy of the original. So nothing has been done to it. The sun on it has a yellow rim and the size of it matches close the expected size; this would indicate that the exposure is "reasonable". In my notes I mentioned that the horizon was hazy which results in a fuzzy line. There was also a cloud bank very close to the horizon. As you also mentioned, the main reason seems indeed to be the different measurement of the heights. To likely lesser extend it might also be the program which you use. I don't know the program from Henning Umland. Could it be that for this sort of calculation it should be used iteratively? I mean this in the sense that you get a first estimate from your start location and use then this estimated location as a new start location. One repeats this until the computed altitude agrees with the observed altitude. Regarding adding a filter. With my present equipment this is - at least in my view - practically not feasible. Remember that I hold in my hand also the chronometer. Marcel On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 7:31 PM, Greg Rudzinskiwrote: > Marcel, > > I see now that the north point of Kinali Island was to be use for a bearing > to get the true photographer location. Heybeli seemed to be a better fit. To > do better with the pixels I would need the original photo unedited or > adjusted. Even so both the horizon and the Sun seemed over exposed which > would cause me to measure a smaller angle and increasing my intercept away > from the assumed position. I did an upper limb observation and got an > intercept of 3 NM away which is closer but still I would have selected > Heybeli for my bearing. > > When taking these pictures try dimming the Sun with filters held over the > upper half of the field of view and then adjust exposure for a dim yet still > visible horizon. I find that this can be done most easily with a circular > polarizer attached to the lens and a second circular polarizer out of its > frame held over the upper half of the field of view then rotated with > fingers until a dim sharp image of the Sun is viewed with an unfiltered > sharp horizon in the lower half of the field. > > GRudzinski > ---------------------------------------------------------------- > NavList message boards and member settings: www.fer3.com/NavList > Members may optionally receive posts by email. > To cancel email delivery, send a message to NoMail[at]fer3.com > ----------------------------------------------------------------