View Single Post
  #3  
Old October 8th 03, 09:09 PM
Randolph J. Herber
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article ,
Sims wrote:

As Steve has noted there are two things happening:
(1) The bearing to point B along a great circle/ellipsoid path
from Point A to B varies along the path. (A computer/autopilot
can be set to follow the ever varying bearing.)


Thanks


I was looking for a formula that does the same, so that i can tell my
heading at a certain point on the course.


I will look at the links given.


Again many thanks all for the help.


Sims


Here is a program that does that:

http://www.freewarepalm.com/astronomy/navigate.shtml

The idea is to compute the great circle heading and distance, divide the
great circle distance by as many legs as desired, project the initial
heading the divided distance, repeat the process from there for one
less leg until no legs remain.

E.g.: from Washington DC to Moskva, RF:

38o 51'N 77o 1' 48"W to 55o 58' 48"N 37o 30'E in 8 legs:

each leg is 607.77 miles:

bearing start
32o 46' 3.86" 38o 51'N 77o 1' 48.00"W
37o 23' 29.85" 46o 3' 58.96"N 70o 11' 54.04"W
44o 5' 15.66" 52o 44' 48.60"N 61o 24' 8.89"W
53o 47' 18.95" 58o 32' 41.37"N 49o 40' 47.65"W
67o 28' 0.55" 62o 53' 15.70"N 34o 1' 55.31"W
84o 58' 38.88" 65o 0' 21.16"N 14o 34' 48.87"W
103o 33' 33.09" 64o 20' 34.61"N 5o 56' 13.18"E
119o 26' 55.57" 61o 5' 21.89"N 23o 46' 41.62"E
55o 58' 48.00"N 37o 30' 0.00"E

Now, try to navigate that accurately. It is hard to do manually.

Randolph J. Herber, , +1 630 840 2966, CD/CDFTF PK-149F,
Mail Stop 318, Fermilab, Kirk & Pine Rds., PO Box 500, Batavia, IL 60510-0500,
USA. (Speaking for myself and not for US, US DOE, FNAL nor URA.) (Product,
trade, or service marks herein belong to their respective owners.)