Great Circle North Pole South Pole Longitude: Meridian
Great Circle North Pole South Pole Longitude: Meridian
The position of a point along the meridian is given by that longitude and its latitude,
measured in angular degrees north or south of the Equator. Each meridian is
perpendicular to all circles of latitude. Each is also the same length, being half of a great
circle on the Earth's surface and therefore measuring 20,003.93 km (12,429.9 miles).
RHUMB LINES
In navigation, a rhumb line, rhumb, (/rʌm/) or loxodrome is an arc crossing all meridians
of longitude at the same angle, that is, a path with constant bearing as measured
relative to true or magnetic north.
GREAT CIRCLE
Any diameter of any great circle coincides with a diameter of the sphere, and therefore
all great circles have the same center and circumference as each other.
This special case of a circle of a sphere is in opposition to a small circle, that is, the
intersection of the sphere and a plane that does not pass through the center. Every
circle in Euclidean 3-space is a great circle of exactly one sphere.
LATITUDE
Latitude is used together with longitude to specify the precise location of features on the
surface of the Earth. On its own, the term latitude should be taken to be the geodetic
latitude as defined below.
Briefly, geodetic latitude at a point is the angle formed by the vector perpendicular (or
normal) to the ellipsoidal surface from that point, and the equatorial plane. Also defined
are six auxiliary latitudes which are used in special applications.
LONGITUDE
In navigation, the course of a vessel or aircraft is the cardinal direction in which the craft
is to be steered. The course is to be distinguished from the heading, which is the
compass direction in which the craft's bow or nose is pointed.
The path that a vessel follows over the ground is called a ground track, course made
good or course over the ground. For an aircraft it is simply its track. The intended track
is a route. For ships and aircraft, routes are typically straight-line segments between
waypoints. A navigator determines the bearing (the compass direction from the craft's
current position) of the next waypoint. Because water currents or wind can cause a craft
to drift off course, a navigator sets a course to steer that compensates for drift. The
helmsman or pilot points the craft on a heading that corresponds to the course to steer.
If the predicted drift is correct, then the craft's track will correspond to the planned
course to the next waypoint. Course directions are specified in degrees from north,
either true or magnetic. In aviation, north is usually expressed as 360°. Navigators used
ordinal directions, instead of compass degrees, e.g. "northeast" instead of 45° until the
mid-20th century when the use of degrees became prevalent.
DISTANCE
Distance is a numerical measurement of how far apart objects or points are. In physics
or everyday usage, distance may refer to a physical length or an estimation based on
other criteria (e.g. "two counties over"). In most cases, "distance from A to B" is
interchangeable with "distance from B to A". In mathematics, a distance function or
metric is a generalization of the concept of physical distance. A metric is a function that
behaves according to a specific set of rules, and is a way of describing what it means
for elements of some space to be "close to" or "far away from" each other.
DEPARTURE
VERTEX
In geometry, a vertex (plural: vertices or vertexes) is a point where two or more curves,
lines, or edges meet. As a consequence of this definition, the point where two lines
meet to form an angle and the corners of polygons and polyhedra are vertices.
MERCATOR CHART
GNOMONIC CHART
A gnomonic map projection displays all great circles as straight lines, resulting in any
straight line segment on a gnomonic map showing a geodesic, the shortest route
between the segment's two endpoints. This is achieved by casting surface points of the
sphere onto a tangent plane, each landing where a ray from the center of the sphere
passes through the point on the surface and then on to the plane. No distortion occurs
at the tangent point, but distortion increases rapidly away from it. Less than half of the
sphere can be projected onto a finite map. Consequently, a rectilinear photographic
lens, which is based on the gnomonic principle, cannot image more than 180 degrees.