NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: More Cocked Hats
From: Bill Lionheart
Date: 2020 Jul 19, 10:58 +0100
From: Bill Lionheart
Date: 2020 Jul 19, 10:58 +0100
Dear David, It is indeed sunny to day and I should get some vit D. Actually quite soon even go our to sea. The power of mathematics is that it can prove or disprove something for an infinite number of cases at once. Numerical simulations can certainly provide a conjecture though. I have not finished reading the paper yet (well as you say the sun is shining!) but the main point seemed to be that the rays may not cross, as these are position "half lines" from bearings on fixed stations or landmarks. It does seem a bit of a shame no one has sorted this out properly before, and it is good if this paper tidies it up and is the "last word". It also seems a bit sad to me that the necessary mathematics was not done until the problem is almost obsolete (at least for the moment until some noew navigational technique uses it). Of course this flavour of the problem is very simple... the probability of being in the cocked hat is 0.25 over a population of cocked hats. Think of "of all the cocked hats I drew I was only in a quarter of them".As soon as you have a specific round of bearings in mind the odds change. Robin Stuart's paper did a nice thing here integrating the Gaussian explicitly over triangles. Best wishes Bill On Sun, 19 Jul 2020 at 09:16, David Pikewrote: > > NavList members with a mathematical bent might be interested in the > latest thoughts on cocked hats from mathematicians. Bárány, Steiger > and Toledo https://arxiv.org/abs/2007.06838 > > > Bill > > I got as far as the bottom of the first page plus a quick scan of the diagrams before my head started to hurt. Thus proving I don’t have a ‘mathematical bent’. However, it seems to me that they’re trying to prove the blindingly obvious. After all, a three PL triangle converging to a single point is generally considered a good fix, but the chances of being in the centre of that tiny triangle much be close to zero. > > I would have thought in these days of the digital computer that it ought to be possible to set up a trial with millions of fixes with the PLs generated randomly from each source, first with the sources for the same equipment with the same bands of error and the dame distance away. Then having seen what you got, you could use sources different distances away or with different band of error to see if you got a different result. After that you could try all sources on one side (i.e. 60 degree not 120 degree cut), perhaps with a bit of systematic error fed in. You might also like to look at the effects of quadrantal error with respect to receiver heading vs source relative bearings. It would be interesting to know which of these made much difference. > > Alternatively, build up the vitamin D by getting out and taking a few real fixes outside. DaveP > >