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Re: The rapid-fire fix
From: Frank Reed
Date: 2009 Apr 28, 23:20 -0700
From: Frank Reed
Date: 2009 Apr 28, 23:20 -0700
John Karl, you wrote: "I don't understand the sight reduction of your "quick fix". You start with one (averaged) altitude at 0930 and get the longitude by a time sight. But longitude by a time sight requires some other info, normally the latitude, which is not known. So what am I missing here in your discussion?? Then you get the latitude form the two sights at 0910 and 0950. I do understand how this is possible because we now have two pieces of information, two H's and the time interval." Whoa there! :-) I wasn't trying to suggest that this was how you would work a rapid-fire fix today. Merely that there was a historical set of sights that you could "map" the problem onto and to point out that even a 19th century navigator had the tools to work certain special cases of statistical sights, somewhat like the "rapid-fire fix" that I'm talking about. Incidentally, the requirement for a latitude in an "old navigation" time sight was usually met with the DR latitude, and the best way to avoid any sensitivity to error in that latitude was to shoot the Sun near the Prime Vertical. But again, that's just a historical side-note --not relevant to this rapid-fire fix. You added: "I don't understand your explanation of "using the rather complicated methods found in most 19th century navigation manuals, we would get latitude from the two altitudes and the time interval between them." Are you referring to something like I just discussed?" Yes. Just so. This particular problem was very popular among the mathematicians of nautical astronomy back in the day. There are a number of solutions. One of them, the preferred solution in Bowditch in mid-century, was the topic of one of the presentations in Mystic in June, 2008. And you wrote: "On the other hand, there is explicit method in my book on pp 78-79, eqs 7.5. These are a simple, understandable, application of the familiar H and Zn equations. The method uses only one more trig equation than two St. Hilaire LOPs. And it gives both Lat and Lon explicitly, without requiring tables or the 0930 calculation." That's mathematically almost identical to crossing two LOPs. You can use that with any pair of sights. But I ask you, John: if someone gave you eleven altitudes of the Moon taken every couple of minutes in close succession, what would you do with them? I'll give you a big hint. You mention the solution in your book peripherally just before describing the method leading up to your set of equations 7.5. And incidentally, what kind of error ellipse would you put around a fix derived from your equations 7.5? A disadvantage of a direct solution like that one is that there is no indication during the calculation that you may have a pair of LOPs that don't yield a good fix. By contrast, a standard LOP plot of two sights does at least show plainly that the two sights may be yielding nearly identical positional information (from two objects in the same or opposite azimuths, in other words). The standard LOP plot doesn't help much in that sense when we get to a dozen sights or more. In fact, the plot looks more confused and less accurate while the actual fix derived is increasingly accurate with more sights. So what we need is a set of equations that gives a least squares solution for the fix (and I should add that this is a running fix) from multiple sights and ALSO gives some error ellipse on the resulting position. After all, what we want to know is not just the best estimate of the position, but also a reasonable estimate of the amount of trust that we should have in that position. Such solutions are available and have been available in many software solutions for celestial navigation for years and years. But because it's hidden in the code, the significance of these solutions is very much un-appreciated. -FER