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Earth radius

Earth radius (denoted as R🜨 or ) is the distance from the center of Earth to a point on or near its surface. Approximating the figure of Earth by an Earth spheroid, the radius ranges from a maximum of nearly 6,378 km (3,963 mi) (equatorial radius, denoted a) to a minimum of nearly 6,357 km (3,950 mi) (polar radius, denoted b).

Earth radius
Cross section of Earth's Interior
General information
Unit systemastronomy, geophysics
Unit ofdistance
SymbolR🜨 or ,
Conversions
R🜨 in ...... is equal to ...
   SI base unit   6.3781×106 m[1]
   Metric system   6,357 to 6,378 km
   English units   3,950 to 3,963 mi

A nominal Earth radius is sometimes used as a unit of measurement in astronomy and geophysics, which is recommended by the International Astronomical Union to be the equatorial value.[1]

A globally-average value is usually considered to be 6,371 kilometres (3,959 mi) with a 0.3% variability (±10 km) for the following reasons. The International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG) provides three reference values: the mean radius (R1) of three radii measured at two equator points and a pole; the authalic radius, which is the radius of a sphere with the same surface area (R2); and the volumetric radius, which is the radius of a sphere having the same volume as the ellipsoid (R3).[2] All three values are about 6,371 kilometres (3,959 mi).

Other ways to define and measure the Earth radius involve the radius of curvature. A few definitions yield values outside the range between polar radius and equatorial radius because they include local or geoidal topography or because they depend on abstract geometrical considerations.

Introduction

 
A scale diagram of the oblateness of the 2003 IERS reference ellipsoid, with north at the top. The light blue region is a circle. The outer edge of the dark blue line is an ellipse with the same minor axis as the circle and the same eccentricity as the Earth. The red line represents the Karman line 100 km (62 mi) above sea level, while the yellow area denotes the altitude range of the ISS in low Earth orbit.

Earth's rotation, internal density variations, and external tidal forces cause its shape to deviate systematically from a perfect sphere.[a] Local topography increases the variance, resulting in a surface of profound complexity. Our descriptions of Earth's surface must be simpler than reality in order to be tractable. Hence, we create models to approximate characteristics of Earth's surface, generally relying on the simplest model that suits the need.

Each of the models in common use involve some notion of the geometric radius. Strictly speaking, spheres are the only solids to have radii, but broader uses of the term radius are common in many fields, including those dealing with models of Earth. The following is a partial list of models of Earth's surface, ordered from exact to more approximate:

In the case of the geoid and ellipsoids, the fixed distance from any point on the model to the specified center is called "a radius of the Earth" or "the radius of the Earth at that point".[d] It is also common to refer to any mean radius of a spherical model as "the radius of the earth". When considering the Earth's real surface, on the other hand, it is uncommon to refer to a "radius", since there is generally no practical need. Rather, elevation above or below sea level is useful.

Regardless of the model, any radius falls between the polar minimum of about 6,357 km and the equatorial maximum of about 6,378 km (3,950 to 3,963 mi). Hence, the Earth deviates from a perfect sphere by only a third of a percent, which supports the spherical model in most contexts and justifies the term "radius of the Earth". While specific values differ, the concepts in this article generalize to any major planet.

Physics of Earth's deformation

Rotation of a planet causes it to approximate an oblate ellipsoid/spheroid with a bulge at the equator and flattening at the North and South Poles, so that the equatorial radius a is larger than the polar radius b by approximately aq. The oblateness constant q is given by

 

where ω is the angular frequency, G is the gravitational constant, and M is the mass of the planet.[e] For the Earth 1/q ≈ 289, which is close to the measured inverse flattening 1/f ≈ 298.257. Additionally, the bulge at the equator shows slow variations. The bulge had been decreasing, but since 1998 the bulge has increased, possibly due to redistribution of ocean mass via currents.[4]

 

The variation in density and crustal thickness causes gravity to vary across the surface and in time, so that the mean sea level differs from the ellipsoid. This difference is the geoid height, positive above or outside the ellipsoid, negative below or inside. The geoid height variation is under 110 m (360 ft) on Earth. The geoid height can change abruptly due to earthquakes (such as the Sumatra-Andaman earthquake) or reduction in ice masses (such as Greenland).[5]

Not all deformations originate within the Earth. Gravitational attraction from the Moon or Sun can cause the Earth's surface at a given point to vary by tenths of a meter over a nearly 12-hour period (see Earth tide).

Radius and local conditions

 
Al-Biruni's (973–1048) method for calculation of the Earth's radius simplified measuring the circumference compared to taking measurements from two locations distant from each other.

Given local and transient influences on surface height, the values defined below are based on a "general purpose" model, refined as globally precisely as possible within 5 m (16 ft) of reference ellipsoid height, and to within 100 m (330 ft) of mean sea level (neglecting geoid height).

Additionally, the radius can be estimated from the curvature of the Earth at a point. Like a torus, the curvature at a point will be greatest (tightest) in one direction (north–south on Earth) and smallest (flattest) perpendicularly (east–west). The corresponding radius of curvature depends on the location and direction of measurement from that point. A consequence is that a distance to the true horizon at the equator is slightly shorter in the north–south direction than in the east–west direction.

In summary, local variations in terrain prevent defining a single "precise" radius. One can only adopt an idealized model. Since the estimate by Eratosthenes, many models have been created. Historically, these models were based on regional topography, giving the best reference ellipsoid for the area under survey. As satellite remote sensing and especially the Global Positioning System gained importance, true global models were developed which, while not as accurate for regional work, best approximate the Earth as a whole.

Extrema: equatorial and polar radii

The following radii are derived from the World Geodetic System 1984 (WGS-84) reference ellipsoid.[6] It is an idealized surface, and the Earth measurements used to calculate it have an uncertainty of ±2 m in both the equatorial and polar dimensions.[7] Additional discrepancies caused by topographical variation at specific locations can be significant. When identifying the position of an observable location, the use of more precise values for WGS-84 radii may not yield a corresponding improvement in accuracy.[clarification needed]

The value for the equatorial radius is defined to the nearest 0.1 m in WGS-84. The value for the polar radius in this section has been rounded to the nearest 0.1 m, which is expected to be adequate for most uses. Refer to the WGS-84 ellipsoid if a more precise value for its polar radius is needed.

  • The Earth's equatorial radius a, or semi-major axis, is the distance from its center to the equator and equals 6,378.1370 km (3,963.1906 mi).[8] The equatorial radius is often used to compare Earth with other planets.
  • The Earth's polar radius b, or semi-minor axis, is the distance from its center to the North and South Poles, and equals 6,356.7523 km (3,949.9028 mi).

Location-dependent radii

 
Three different radii as a function of Earth's latitude. R is the geocentric radius; M is the meridional radius of curvature; and N is the prime vertical radius of curvature.

Geocentric radius

The geocentric radius is the distance from the Earth's center to a point on the spheroid surface at geodetic latitude φ:

 

where a and b are, respectively, the equatorial radius and the polar radius.

The extrema geocentric radii on the ellipsoid coincide with the equatorial and polar radii. They are vertices of the ellipse and also coincide with minimum and maximum radius of curvature.

Radii of curvature

Principal radii of curvature

There are two principal radii of curvature: along the meridional and prime-vertical normal sections.

Meridional

In particular, the Earth's meridional radius of curvature (in the north–south direction) at φ is:

 

where   is the eccentricity of the earth. This is the radius that Eratosthenes measured in his arc measurement.

Prime vertical
 
The length PQ, called the prime vertical radius, is  . The length IQ is equal to  .  .

If one point had appeared due east of the other, one finds the approximate curvature in the east–west direction.[f]

This Earth's prime-vertical radius of curvature, also called the Earth's transverse radius of curvature, is defined perpendicular (orthogonal) to M at geodetic latitude φ is:[g]

 

N can also be interpreted geometrically as the normal distance from the ellipsoid surface to the polar axis.[9] The radius of a parallel of latitude is given by  .[10]

Polar and equatorial radius of curvature

The Earth's meridional radius of curvature at the equator equals the meridian's semi-latus rectum:

b2/a = 6,335.439 km

The Earth's prime-vertical radius of curvature at the equator equals the equatorial radius, N = a.

The Earth's polar radius of curvature (either meridional or prime-vertical) is:

a2/b = 6,399.594 km
Derivation
Extended content

The principal curvatures are the roots of Equation (125) in:[11]

 

where in the first fundamental form for a surface (Equation (112) in [11]):

 

E, F, and G are elements of the metric tensor:

 

 ,  ,  

in the second fundamental form for a surface (Equation (123) in [11]):

 

e, f, and g are elements of the shape tensor:

 

  is the unit normal to the surface at  , and because   and   are tangents to the surface,

 

is normal to the surface at  .

With   for an oblate spheroid, the curvatures are

  and  

and the principal radii of curvature are

  and  

The first and second radii of curvature correspond, respectively, to the Earth's meridional and prime-vertical radii of curvature.

Geometrically, the second fundamental form gives the distance from   to the plane tangent at  .

Combined radii of curvature

Azimuthal

The Earth's azimuthal radius of curvature, along an Earth normal section at an azimuth (measured clockwise from north) α and at latitude φ, is derived from Euler's curvature formula as follows:[12]: 97 

 
Non-directional

It is possible to combine the principal radii of curvature above in a non-directional manner.

The Earth's Gaussian radius of curvature at latitude φ is:[12]

 

Where K is the Gaussian curvature,  .

The Earth's mean radius of curvature at latitude φ is:[12]: 97 

 

Global radii

The Earth can be modeled as a sphere in many ways. This section describes the common ways. The various radii derived here use the notation and dimensions noted above for the Earth as derived from the WGS-84 ellipsoid;[6] namely,

Equatorial radius: a = (6378.1370 km)
Polar radius: b = (6356.7523 km)

A sphere being a gross approximation of the spheroid, which itself is an approximation of the geoid, units are given here in kilometers rather than the millimeter resolution appropriate for geodesy.

Nominal radius

In astronomy, the International Astronomical Union denotes the nominal equatorial Earth radius as  , which is defined to be 6,378.1 km (3,963.2 mi).[1]: 3  The nominal polar Earth radius is defined as   = 6,356.8 km (3,949.9 mi). These values correspond to the zero Earth tide convention. Equatorial radius is conventionally used as the nominal value unless the polar radius is explicitly required.[1]: 4  The nominal radius serves as a unit of length for astronomy. (The notation is defined such that it can be easily generalized for other planets; e.g.,   for the nominal polar Jupiter radius.)

Arithmetic mean radius

 
Equatorial (a), polar (b) and arithmetic mean Earth radii as defined in the 1984 World Geodetic System revision (not to scale)

In geophysics, the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG) defines the Earth's arithmetic mean radius (denoted R1) to be[2]

 

The factor of two accounts for the biaxial symmetry in Earth's spheroid, a specialization of triaxial ellipsoid. For Earth, the arithmetic mean radius is 6,371.0088 km (3,958.7613 mi).[13]

Authalic radius

Earth's authalic radius (meaning "equal area") is the radius of a hypothetical perfect sphere that has the same surface area as the reference ellipsoid. The IUGG denotes the authalic radius as R2.[2] A closed-form solution exists for a spheroid:[14]

 

where e2 = a2b2/a2 and A is the surface area of the spheroid.

For the Earth, the authalic radius is 6,371.0072 km (3,958.7603 mi).[13]

The authalic radius   also corresponds to the radius of (global) mean curvature, obtained by averaging the Gaussian curvature,  , over the surface of the ellipsoid. Using the Gauss-Bonnet theorem, this gives

 

Volumetric radius

Another spherical model is defined by the Earth's volumetric radius, which is the radius of a sphere of volume equal to the ellipsoid. The IUGG denotes the volumetric radius as R3.[2]

 

For Earth, the volumetric radius equals 6,371.0008 km (3,958.7564 mi).[13]

Rectifying radius

Another global radius is the Earth's rectifying radius, giving a sphere with circumference equal to the perimeter of the ellipse described by any polar cross section of the ellipsoid. This requires an elliptic integral to find, given the polar and equatorial radii:

 

The rectifying radius is equivalent to the meridional mean, which is defined as the average value of M:[14]

 

For integration limits of [0,π/2], the integrals for rectifying radius and mean radius evaluate to the same result, which, for Earth, amounts to 6,367.4491 km (3,956.5494 mi).

The meridional mean is well approximated by the semicubic mean of the two axes,[citation needed]

 

which differs from the exact result by less than 1 μm (4×10−5 in); the mean of the two axes,

 

about 6,367.445 km (3,956.547 mi), can also be used.

Topographical radii

The mathematical expressions above apply over the surface of the ellipsoid. The cases below considers Earth's topography, above or below a reference ellipsoid. As such, they are topographical geocentric distances, Rt, which depends not only on latitude.

Topographical extremes

  • Maximum Rt: the summit of Chimborazo is 6,384.4 km (3,967.1 mi) from the Earth's center.
  • Minimum Rt: the floor of the Arctic Ocean is approximately 6,352.8 km (3,947.4 mi) from the Earth's center.[15]

Topographical global mean

The topographical mean geocentric distance averages elevations everywhere, resulting in a value 230 m larger than the IUGG mean radius, the authalic radius, or the volumetric radius. This topographical average is 6,371.230 km (3,958.899 mi) with uncertainty of 10 m (33 ft).[16]

Derived quantities: diameter, circumference, arc-length, area, volume

Earth's diameter is simply twice Earth's radius; for example, equatorial diameter (2a) and polar diameter (2b). For the WGS84 ellipsoid, that's respectively:

  • 2a = 12,756.2740 km (7,926.3812 mi),
  • 2b = 12,713.5046 km (7,899.8055 mi).

Earth's circumference equals the perimeter length. The equatorial circumference is simply the circle perimeter: Ce=2πa, in terms of the equatorial radius, a. The polar circumference equals Cp=4mp, four times the quarter meridian mp=aE(e), where the polar radius b enters via the eccentricity, e=(1−b2/a2)0.5; see Ellipse#Circumference for details.

Arc length of more general surface curves, such as meridian arcs and geodesics, can also be derived from Earth's equatorial and polar radii.

Likewise for surface area, either based on a map projection or a geodesic polygon.

Earth's volume, or that of the reference ellipsoid, is V = 4/3πa2b. Using the parameters from WGS84 ellipsoid of revolution, a = 6,378.137 km and b = 6356.7523142 km, V = 1.08321×1012 km3 (2.5988×1011 cu mi).[17]

Published values

This table summarizes the accepted values of the Earth's radius.

Agency Description Value (in meters) Ref
IAU nominal "zero tide" equatorial 6378100 [1]
IAU nominal "zero tide" polar 6356800 [1]
IUGG equatorial radius 6378137 [2]
IUGG semiminor axis (b) 6356752.3141 [2]
IUGG polar radius of curvature (c) 6399593.6259 [2]
IUGG mean radius (R1) 6371008.7714 [2]
IUGG radius of sphere of same surface (R2) 6371007.1810 [2]
IUGG radius of sphere of same volume (R3) 6371000.7900 [2]
IERS WGS-84 ellipsoid, semi-major axis (a) 6378137.0 [6]
IERS WGS-84 ellipsoid, semi-minor axis (b) 6356752.3142 [6]
IERS WGS-84 ellipsoid, polar radius of curvature (c) 6399593.6258 [6]
IERS WGS-84 ellipsoid, Mean radius of semi-axes (R1) 6371008.7714 [6]
IERS WGS-84 ellipsoid, Radius of Sphere of Equal Area (R2) 6371007.1809 [6]
IERS WGS-84 ellipsoid, Radius of Sphere of Equal Volume (R3) 6371000.7900 [6]
GRS 80 semi-major axis (a) 6378137.0
GRS 80 semi-minor axis (b) ≈6356752.314140
Spherical Earth Approx. of Radius (RE) 6366707.0195 [18]
meridional radius of curvature at the equator 6335439
Maximum (the summit of Chimborazo) 6384400 [15]
Minimum (the floor of the Arctic Ocean) 6352800 [15]
Average distance from center to surface 6371230±10 [16]

History

The first published reference to the Earth's size appeared around 350 BC, when Aristotle reported in his book On the Heavens[19] that mathematicians had guessed the circumference of the Earth to be 400,000 stadia. Scholars have interpreted Aristotle's figure to be anywhere from highly accurate[20] to almost double the true value.[21] The first known scientific measurement and calculation of the circumference of the Earth was performed by Eratosthenes in about 240 BC. Estimates of the accuracy of Eratosthenes's measurement range from 0.5% to 17%.[22] For both Aristotle and Eratosthenes, uncertainty in the accuracy of their estimates is due to modern uncertainty over which stadion length they meant.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For details see figure of the Earth, geoid, and Earth tide.
  2. ^ There is no single center to the geoid; it varies according to local geodetic conditions.
  3. ^ In a geocentric ellipsoid, the center of the ellipsoid coincides with some computed center of Earth, and best models the earth as a whole. Geodetic ellipsoids are better suited to regional idiosyncrasies of the geoid. A partial surface of an ellipsoid gets fitted to the region, in which case the center and orientation of the ellipsoid generally do not coincide with the earth's center of mass or axis of rotation.
  4. ^ The value of the radius is completely dependent upon the latitude in the case of an ellipsoid model, and nearly so on the geoid.
  5. ^ This follows from the International Astronomical Union definition rule (2): a planet assumes a shape due to hydrostatic equilibrium where gravity and centrifugal forces are nearly balanced.[3]
  6. ^ East–west directions can be misleading. Point B, which appears due east from A, will be closer to the equator than A. Thus the curvature found this way is smaller than the curvature of a circle of constant latitude, except at the equator. West can be exchanged for east in this discussion.
  7. ^ N is defined as the radius of curvature in the plane that is normal to both the surface of the ellipsoid at, and the meridian passing through, the specific point of interest.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Mamajek, E. E; Prsa, A; Torres, G; et al. (2015). "IAU 2015 Resolution B3 on Recommended Nominal Conversion Constants for Selected Solar and Planetary Properties". arXiv:1510.07674 [astro-ph.SR].
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Moritz, H. (1980). Geodetic Reference System 1980, by resolution of the XVII General Assembly of the IUGG in Canberra.
  3. ^ IAU 2006 General Assembly: Result of the IAU Resolution votes 2006-11-07 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ , Aug. 1, 2002, Goddard Space Flight Center.
  5. ^ NASA's Grace Finds Greenland Melting Faster, 'Sees' Sumatra Quake, December 20, 2005, Goddard Space Flight Center.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h "WGS84RPT.tif:Corel PHOTO-PAINT" (PDF). Retrieved 2018-10-17.
  7. ^ (PDF). earth-info.nga.mil. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-08-04. Retrieved 2008-12-31.
  8. ^ . Numerical Standards for Fundamental Astronomy: Astronomical Constants : Current Best Estimates (CBEs). IAU Division I Working Group. 2012. Archived from the original on 2016-08-26. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
  9. ^ Bowring, B. R. (October 1987). "Notes on the curvature in the prime vertical section". Survey Review. 29 (226): 195–196. doi:10.1179/sre.1987.29.226.195.
  10. ^ Bomford, G. (1952). Geodesy. OCLC 489193198.
  11. ^ a b c Lass, Harry (1950). Vector and Tensor Analysis. McGraw Hill Book Company, Inc. pp. 71–77.
  12. ^ a b c Torge, Wolfgang (2001). Geodesy. ISBN 9783110170726.
  13. ^ a b c Moritz, H. (March 2000). "Geodetic Reference System 1980". Journal of Geodesy. 74 (1): 128–133. Bibcode:2000JGeod..74..128.. doi:10.1007/s001900050278. S2CID 195290884.
  14. ^ a b Snyder, J.P. (1987). Map Projections – A Working Manual (US Geological Survey Professional Paper 1395) p. 16–17. Washington D.C: United States Government Printing Office.
  15. ^ a b c . Guam.discover-theworld.com. 1960-01-23. Archived from the original on 2012-09-10. Retrieved 2013-09-16.
  16. ^ a b Frédéric Chambat; Bernard Valette (2001). (PDF). Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors. 124 (3–4): 234–253. Bibcode:2001PEPI..124..237C. doi:10.1016/S0031-9201(01)00200-X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 July 2020. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  17. ^ Williams, David R. (2004-09-01), Earth Fact Sheet, NASA, retrieved 2007-03-17
  18. ^ Phillips, Warren (2004). Mechanics of Flight. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 923. ISBN 0471334588.
  19. ^ Aristotle. On the Heavens. Vol. Book II 298 B. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  20. ^ Drummond, William (1817). "On the Science of the Egyptians and Chaldeans, Part I". The Classical Journal. 16: 159.
  21. ^ Clarke, Alexander Ross; Helmert, Friedrich Robert (1911). "Earth, Figure of the" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 801–813.
  22. ^ "Eratosthenes, the Greek Scientist". Britannica.com. 2016.

External links

earth, radius, historical, development, spherical, earth, determination, measurement, denoted, displaystyle, distance, from, center, earth, point, near, surface, approximating, figure, earth, earth, spheroid, radius, ranges, from, maximum, nearly, equatorial, . For its historical development see Spherical Earth For its determination see Arc measurement Earth radius denoted as R or R E displaystyle R E is the distance from the center of Earth to a point on or near its surface Approximating the figure of Earth by an Earth spheroid the radius ranges from a maximum of nearly 6 378 km 3 963 mi equatorial radius denoted a to a minimum of nearly 6 357 km 3 950 mi polar radius denoted b Earth radiusCross section of Earth s InteriorGeneral informationUnit systemastronomy geophysicsUnit ofdistanceSymbolR or R E displaystyle R E R e E N displaystyle mathcal R mathrm eE mathrm N Conversions1 R in is equal to SI base unit 6 3781 106 m 1 Metric system 6 357 to 6 378 km English units 3 950 to 3 963 miA nominal Earth radius is sometimes used as a unit of measurement in astronomy and geophysics which is recommended by the International Astronomical Union to be the equatorial value 1 A globally average value is usually considered to be 6 371 kilometres 3 959 mi with a 0 3 variability 10 km for the following reasons The International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics IUGG provides three reference values the mean radius R1 of three radii measured at two equator points and a pole the authalic radius which is the radius of a sphere with the same surface area R2 and the volumetric radius which is the radius of a sphere having the same volume as the ellipsoid R3 2 All three values are about 6 371 kilometres 3 959 mi Other ways to define and measure the Earth radius involve the radius of curvature A few definitions yield values outside the range between polar radius and equatorial radius because they include local or geoidal topography or because they depend on abstract geometrical considerations Contents 1 Introduction 1 1 Physics of Earth s deformation 1 2 Radius and local conditions 2 Extrema equatorial and polar radii 3 Location dependent radii 3 1 Geocentric radius 3 2 Radii of curvature 3 2 1 Principal radii of curvature 3 2 1 1 Meridional 3 2 1 2 Prime vertical 3 2 1 3 Polar and equatorial radius of curvature 3 2 1 4 Derivation 3 2 2 Combined radii of curvature 3 2 2 1 Azimuthal 3 2 2 2 Non directional 4 Global radii 4 1 Nominal radius 4 2 Arithmetic mean radius 4 3 Authalic radius 4 4 Volumetric radius 4 5 Rectifying radius 5 Topographical radii 5 1 Topographical extremes 5 2 Topographical global mean 6 Derived quantities diameter circumference arc length area volume 7 Published values 8 History 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksIntroduction Edit A scale diagram of the oblateness of the 2003 IERS reference ellipsoid with north at the top The light blue region is a circle The outer edge of the dark blue line is an ellipse with the same minor axis as the circle and the same eccentricity as the Earth The red line represents the Karman line 100 km 62 mi above sea level while the yellow area denotes the altitude range of the ISS in low Earth orbit Main articles Figure of the Earth Earth ellipsoid and Reference ellipsoid Earth s rotation internal density variations and external tidal forces cause its shape to deviate systematically from a perfect sphere a Local topography increases the variance resulting in a surface of profound complexity Our descriptions of Earth s surface must be simpler than reality in order to be tractable Hence we create models to approximate characteristics of Earth s surface generally relying on the simplest model that suits the need Each of the models in common use involve some notion of the geometric radius Strictly speaking spheres are the only solids to have radii but broader uses of the term radius are common in many fields including those dealing with models of Earth The following is a partial list of models of Earth s surface ordered from exact to more approximate The actual surface of Earth The geoid defined by mean sea level at each point on the real surface b A spheroid also called an ellipsoid of revolution geocentric to model the entire Earth or else geodetic for regional work c A sphereIn the case of the geoid and ellipsoids the fixed distance from any point on the model to the specified center is called a radius of the Earth or the radius of the Earth at that point d It is also common to refer to any mean radius of a spherical model as the radius of the earth When considering the Earth s real surface on the other hand it is uncommon to refer to a radius since there is generally no practical need Rather elevation above or below sea level is useful Regardless of the model any radius falls between the polar minimum of about 6 357 km and the equatorial maximum of about 6 378 km 3 950 to 3 963 mi Hence the Earth deviates from a perfect sphere by only a third of a percent which supports the spherical model in most contexts and justifies the term radius of the Earth While specific values differ the concepts in this article generalize to any major planet Physics of Earth s deformation Edit Rotation of a planet causes it to approximate an oblate ellipsoid spheroid with a bulge at the equator and flattening at the North and South Poles so that the equatorial radius a is larger than the polar radius b by approximately aq The oblateness constant q is given by q a 3 w 2 G M displaystyle q frac a 3 omega 2 GM where w is the angular frequency G is the gravitational constant and M is the mass of the planet e For the Earth 1 q 289 which is close to the measured inverse flattening 1 f 298 257 Additionally the bulge at the equator shows slow variations The bulge had been decreasing but since 1998 the bulge has increased possibly due to redistribution of ocean mass via currents 4 The variation in density and crustal thickness causes gravity to vary across the surface and in time so that the mean sea level differs from the ellipsoid This difference is the geoid height positive above or outside the ellipsoid negative below or inside The geoid height variation is under 110 m 360 ft on Earth The geoid height can change abruptly due to earthquakes such as the Sumatra Andaman earthquake or reduction in ice masses such as Greenland 5 Not all deformations originate within the Earth Gravitational attraction from the Moon or Sun can cause the Earth s surface at a given point to vary by tenths of a meter over a nearly 12 hour period see Earth tide Radius and local conditions Edit Al Biruni s 973 1048 method for calculation of the Earth s radius simplified measuring the circumference compared to taking measurements from two locations distant from each other Given local and transient influences on surface height the values defined below are based on a general purpose model refined as globally precisely as possible within 5 m 16 ft of reference ellipsoid height and to within 100 m 330 ft of mean sea level neglecting geoid height Additionally the radius can be estimated from the curvature of the Earth at a point Like a torus the curvature at a point will be greatest tightest in one direction north south on Earth and smallest flattest perpendicularly east west The corresponding radius of curvature depends on the location and direction of measurement from that point A consequence is that a distance to the true horizon at the equator is slightly shorter in the north south direction than in the east west direction In summary local variations in terrain prevent defining a single precise radius One can only adopt an idealized model Since the estimate by Eratosthenes many models have been created Historically these models were based on regional topography giving the best reference ellipsoid for the area under survey As satellite remote sensing and especially the Global Positioning System gained importance true global models were developed which while not as accurate for regional work best approximate the Earth as a whole Extrema equatorial and polar radii EditThe following radii are derived from the World Geodetic System 1984 WGS 84 reference ellipsoid 6 It is an idealized surface and the Earth measurements used to calculate it have an uncertainty of 2 m in both the equatorial and polar dimensions 7 Additional discrepancies caused by topographical variation at specific locations can be significant When identifying the position of an observable location the use of more precise values for WGS 84 radii may not yield a corresponding improvement in accuracy clarification needed The value for the equatorial radius is defined to the nearest 0 1 m in WGS 84 The value for the polar radius in this section has been rounded to the nearest 0 1 m which is expected to be adequate for most uses Refer to the WGS 84 ellipsoid if a more precise value for its polar radius is needed The Earth s equatorial radius a or semi major axis is the distance from its center to the equator and equals 6 378 1370 km 3 963 1906 mi 8 The equatorial radius is often used to compare Earth with other planets The Earth s polar radius b or semi minor axis is the distance from its center to the North and South Poles and equals 6 356 7523 km 3 949 9028 mi Location dependent radii Edit Three different radii as a function of Earth s latitude R is the geocentric radius M is the meridional radius of curvature and N is the prime vertical radius of curvature Geocentric radius Edit Not to be confused with Geocentric distance The geocentric radius is the distance from the Earth s center to a point on the spheroid surface at geodetic latitude f R f a 2 cos f 2 b 2 sin f 2 a cos f 2 b sin f 2 displaystyle R varphi sqrt frac a 2 cos varphi 2 b 2 sin varphi 2 a cos varphi 2 b sin varphi 2 where a and b are respectively the equatorial radius and the polar radius The extrema geocentric radii on the ellipsoid coincide with the equatorial and polar radii They are vertices of the ellipse and also coincide with minimum and maximum radius of curvature Radii of curvature Edit See also Spheroid Curvature Principal radii of curvature Edit There are two principal radii of curvature along the meridional and prime vertical normal sections Meridional Edit In particular the Earth s meridional radius of curvature in the north south direction at f is M f a b 2 a cos f 2 b sin f 2 3 2 a 1 e 2 1 e 2 sin 2 f 3 2 1 e 2 a 2 N f 3 displaystyle M varphi frac ab 2 big a cos varphi 2 b sin varphi 2 big frac 3 2 frac a 1 e 2 1 e 2 sin 2 varphi frac 3 2 frac 1 e 2 a 2 N varphi 3 where e displaystyle e is the eccentricity of the earth This is the radius that Eratosthenes measured in his arc measurement Prime vertical Edit The length PQ called the prime vertical radius is N ϕ displaystyle N phi The length IQ is equal to e 2 N ϕ displaystyle e 2 N phi R X Y Z displaystyle R X Y Z If one point had appeared due east of the other one finds the approximate curvature in the east west direction f This Earth s prime vertical radius of curvature also called the Earth s transverse radius of curvature is defined perpendicular orthogonal to M at geodetic latitude f is g N f a 2 a cos f 2 b sin f 2 a 1 e 2 sin 2 f displaystyle N varphi frac a 2 sqrt a cos varphi 2 b sin varphi 2 frac a sqrt 1 e 2 sin 2 varphi N can also be interpreted geometrically as the normal distance from the ellipsoid surface to the polar axis 9 The radius of a parallel of latitude is given by p N cos f displaystyle p N cos varphi 10 Polar and equatorial radius of curvature Edit The Earth s meridional radius of curvature at the equator equals the meridian s semi latus rectum b2 a 6 335 439 kmThe Earth s prime vertical radius of curvature at the equator equals the equatorial radius N a The Earth s polar radius of curvature either meridional or prime vertical is a2 b 6 399 594 kmDerivation Edit Extended contentThe principal curvatures are the roots of Equation 125 in 11 E G F 2 k 2 e G g E 2 f F k e g f 2 0 det A k B displaystyle EG F 2 kappa 2 eG gE 2fF kappa eg f 2 0 det A kappa B where in the first fundamental form for a surface Equation 112 in 11 d s 2 i j a i j d w i d w j E d f 2 2 F d f d l G d l 2 displaystyle ds 2 sum ij a ij dw i dw j E d varphi 2 2F d varphi d lambda G d lambda 2 E F and G are elements of the metric tensor A a i j n r n w i r n w j E F F G displaystyle A a ij sum nu frac partial r nu partial w i frac partial r nu partial w j left begin array ll E amp F F amp G end array right r r 1 r 2 r 3 T x y z T displaystyle r r 1 r 2 r 3 T x y z T w 1 f displaystyle w 1 varphi w 2 l displaystyle w 2 lambda in the second fundamental form for a surface Equation 123 in 11 2 D i j b i j d w i d w j e d f 2 2 f d f d l g d l 2 displaystyle 2D sum ij b ij dw i dw j e d varphi 2 2f d varphi d lambda g d lambda 2 e f and g are elements of the shape tensor B b i j n n n 2 r n w i w j e f f g displaystyle B b ij sum nu n nu frac partial 2 r nu partial w i partial w j left begin array ll e amp f f amp g end array right n N N displaystyle n frac N N is the unit normal to the surface at r displaystyle r and because r f displaystyle frac partial r partial varphi and r l displaystyle frac partial r partial lambda are tangents to the surface N r f r l displaystyle N frac partial r partial varphi times frac partial r partial lambda is normal to the surface at r displaystyle r With F f 0 displaystyle F f 0 for an oblate spheroid the curvatures are k 1 g G displaystyle kappa 1 frac g G and k 2 e E displaystyle kappa 2 frac e E and the principal radii of curvature are R 1 1 k 1 displaystyle R 1 frac 1 kappa 1 and R 2 1 k 2 displaystyle R 2 frac 1 kappa 2 The first and second radii of curvature correspond respectively to the Earth s meridional and prime vertical radii of curvature Geometrically the second fundamental form gives the distance from r d r displaystyle r dr to the plane tangent at r displaystyle r Combined radii of curvature Edit Azimuthal Edit The Earth s azimuthal radius of curvature along an Earth normal section at an azimuth measured clockwise from north a and at latitude f is derived from Euler s curvature formula as follows 12 97 R c 1 cos 2 a M sin 2 a N displaystyle R mathrm c frac 1 dfrac cos 2 alpha M dfrac sin 2 alpha N Non directional Edit It is possible to combine the principal radii of curvature above in a non directional manner The Earth s Gaussian radius of curvature at latitude f is 12 R a f 1 K 1 2 p 0 2 p R c a d a M N a 2 b a cos f 2 b sin f 2 a 1 e 2 1 e 2 sin 2 f displaystyle R mathrm a varphi frac 1 sqrt K frac 1 2 pi int 0 2 pi R mathrm c alpha d alpha sqrt MN frac a 2 b a cos varphi 2 b sin varphi 2 frac a sqrt 1 e 2 1 e 2 sin 2 varphi Where K is the Gaussian curvature K k 1 k 2 det B det A displaystyle K kappa 1 kappa 2 frac det B det A The Earth s mean radius of curvature at latitude f is 12 97 R m 2 1 M 1 N displaystyle R mathrm m frac 2 dfrac 1 M dfrac 1 N Global radii EditThe Earth can be modeled as a sphere in many ways This section describes the common ways The various radii derived here use the notation and dimensions noted above for the Earth as derived from the WGS 84 ellipsoid 6 namely Equatorial radius a 6378 1370 km Polar radius b 6356 7523 km A sphere being a gross approximation of the spheroid which itself is an approximation of the geoid units are given here in kilometers rather than the millimeter resolution appropriate for geodesy Nominal radius Edit In astronomy the International Astronomical Union denotes the nominal equatorial Earth radius as R e E N displaystyle mathcal R mathrm eE mathrm N which is defined to be 6 378 1 km 3 963 2 mi 1 3 The nominal polar Earth radius is defined as R p E N displaystyle mathcal R mathrm pE mathrm N 6 356 8 km 3 949 9 mi These values correspond to the zero Earth tide convention Equatorial radius is conventionally used as the nominal value unless the polar radius is explicitly required 1 4 The nominal radius serves as a unit of length for astronomy The notation is defined such that it can be easily generalized for other planets e g R p J N displaystyle mathcal R mathrm pJ mathrm N for the nominal polar Jupiter radius Arithmetic mean radius Edit Equatorial a polar b and arithmetic mean Earth radii as defined in the 1984 World Geodetic System revision not to scale In geophysics the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics IUGG defines the Earth s arithmetic mean radius denoted R1 to be 2 R 1 2 a b 3 displaystyle R 1 frac 2a b 3 The factor of two accounts for the biaxial symmetry in Earth s spheroid a specialization of triaxial ellipsoid For Earth the arithmetic mean radius is 6 371 0088 km 3 958 7613 mi 13 Authalic radius Edit See also Authalic latitude Earth s authalic radius meaning equal area is the radius of a hypothetical perfect sphere that has the same surface area as the reference ellipsoid The IUGG denotes the authalic radius as R2 2 A closed form solution exists for a spheroid 14 R 2 a 2 b 2 e ln 1 e b a 2 a 2 2 b 2 2 tanh 1 e e A 4 p displaystyle R 2 sqrt frac a 2 frac b 2 e ln left frac 1 e b a right 2 sqrt frac a 2 2 frac b 2 2 frac tanh 1 e e sqrt frac A 4 pi where e2 a2 b2 a2 and A is the surface area of the spheroid For the Earth the authalic radius is 6 371 0072 km 3 958 7603 mi 13 The authalic radius R 2 displaystyle R 2 also corresponds to the radius of global mean curvature obtained by averaging the Gaussian curvature K displaystyle K over the surface of the ellipsoid Using the Gauss Bonnet theorem this gives K d A A 4 p A 1 R 2 2 displaystyle frac int K dA A frac 4 pi A frac 1 R 2 2 Volumetric radius Edit Another spherical model is defined by the Earth s volumetric radius which is the radius of a sphere of volume equal to the ellipsoid The IUGG denotes the volumetric radius as R3 2 R 3 a 2 b 3 displaystyle R 3 sqrt 3 a 2 b For Earth the volumetric radius equals 6 371 0008 km 3 958 7564 mi 13 Rectifying radius Edit See also Quarter meridian and Rectifying latitude Another global radius is the Earth s rectifying radius giving a sphere with circumference equal to the perimeter of the ellipse described by any polar cross section of the ellipsoid This requires an elliptic integral to find given the polar and equatorial radii M r 2 p 0 p 2 a 2 cos 2 f b 2 sin 2 f d f displaystyle M mathrm r frac 2 pi int 0 frac pi 2 sqrt a 2 cos 2 varphi b 2 sin 2 varphi d varphi The rectifying radius is equivalent to the meridional mean which is defined as the average value of M 14 M r 2 p 0 p 2 M f d f displaystyle M mathrm r frac 2 pi int 0 frac pi 2 M varphi d varphi For integration limits of 0 p 2 the integrals for rectifying radius and mean radius evaluate to the same result which for Earth amounts to 6 367 4491 km 3 956 5494 mi The meridional mean is well approximated by the semicubic mean of the two axes citation needed M r a 3 2 b 3 2 2 2 3 displaystyle M mathrm r approx left frac a frac 3 2 b frac 3 2 2 right frac 2 3 which differs from the exact result by less than 1 mm 4 10 5 in the mean of the two axes M r a b 2 displaystyle M mathrm r approx frac a b 2 about 6 367 445 km 3 956 547 mi can also be used Topographical radii EditSee also Earth Size and shape The mathematical expressions above apply over the surface of the ellipsoid The cases below considers Earth s topography above or below a reference ellipsoid As such they are topographical geocentric distances Rt which depends not only on latitude Topographical extremes Edit Maximum Rt the summit of Chimborazo is 6 384 4 km 3 967 1 mi from the Earth s center Minimum Rt the floor of the Arctic Ocean is approximately 6 352 8 km 3 947 4 mi from the Earth s center 15 Topographical global mean Edit The topographical mean geocentric distance averages elevations everywhere resulting in a value 230 m larger than the IUGG mean radius the authalic radius or the volumetric radius This topographical average is 6 371 230 km 3 958 899 mi with uncertainty of 10 m 33 ft 16 Derived quantities diameter circumference arc length area volume EditEarth s diameter is simply twice Earth s radius for example equatorial diameter 2a and polar diameter 2b For the WGS84 ellipsoid that s respectively 2a 12 756 2740 km 7 926 3812 mi 2b 12 713 5046 km 7 899 8055 mi Earth s circumference equals the perimeter length The equatorial circumference is simply the circle perimeter Ce 2pa in terms of the equatorial radius a The polar circumference equals Cp 4mp four times the quarter meridian mp aE e where the polar radius b enters via the eccentricity e 1 b2 a2 0 5 see Ellipse Circumference for details Arc length of more general surface curves such as meridian arcs and geodesics can also be derived from Earth s equatorial and polar radii Likewise for surface area either based on a map projection or a geodesic polygon Earth s volume or that of the reference ellipsoid is V 4 3 p a2b Using the parameters from WGS84 ellipsoid of revolution a 6 378 137 km and b 6356 7523142 km V 1 08321 1012 km3 2 5988 1011 cu mi 17 Published values EditThis table summarizes the accepted values of the Earth s radius Agency Description Value in meters RefIAU nominal zero tide equatorial 6378 100 1 IAU nominal zero tide polar 6356 800 1 IUGG equatorial radius 6378 137 2 IUGG semiminor axis b 6356 752 3141 2 IUGG polar radius of curvature c 6399 593 6259 2 IUGG mean radius R1 6371 008 7714 2 IUGG radius of sphere of same surface R2 6371 007 1810 2 IUGG radius of sphere of same volume R3 6371 000 7900 2 IERS WGS 84 ellipsoid semi major axis a 6378 137 0 6 IERS WGS 84 ellipsoid semi minor axis b 6356 752 3142 6 IERS WGS 84 ellipsoid polar radius of curvature c 6399 593 6258 6 IERS WGS 84 ellipsoid Mean radius of semi axes R1 6371 008 7714 6 IERS WGS 84 ellipsoid Radius of Sphere of Equal Area R2 6371 007 1809 6 IERS WGS 84 ellipsoid Radius of Sphere of Equal Volume R3 6371 000 7900 6 GRS 80 semi major axis a 6378 137 0GRS 80 semi minor axis b 6356 752 314140Spherical Earth Approx of Radius RE 6366 707 0195 18 meridional radius of curvature at the equator 6335 439Maximum the summit of Chimborazo 6384 400 15 Minimum the floor of the Arctic Ocean 6352 800 15 Average distance from center to surface 6371 230 10 16 History EditMain article History of geodesy The first published reference to the Earth s size appeared around 350 BC when Aristotle reported in his book On the Heavens 19 that mathematicians had guessed the circumference of the Earth to be 400 000 stadia Scholars have interpreted Aristotle s figure to be anywhere from highly accurate 20 to almost double the true value 21 The first known scientific measurement and calculation of the circumference of the Earth was performed by Eratosthenes in about 240 BC Estimates of the accuracy of Eratosthenes s measurement range from 0 5 to 17 22 For both Aristotle and Eratosthenes uncertainty in the accuracy of their estimates is due to modern uncertainty over which stadion length they meant See also EditEarth s circumference Earth mass Effective Earth radius Geodesy Geographical distance Osculating sphere History of geodesy Template Earth radius Planetary radiusNotes Edit For details see figure of the Earth geoid and Earth tide There is no single center to the geoid it varies according to local geodetic conditions In a geocentric ellipsoid the center of the ellipsoid coincides with some computed center of Earth and best models the earth as a whole Geodetic ellipsoids are better suited to regional idiosyncrasies of the geoid A partial surface of an ellipsoid gets fitted to the region in which case the center and orientation of the ellipsoid generally do not coincide with the earth s center of mass or axis of rotation The value of the radius is completely dependent upon the latitude in the case of an ellipsoid model and nearly so on the geoid This follows from the International Astronomical Union definition rule 2 a planet assumes a shape due to hydrostatic equilibrium where gravity and centrifugal forces are nearly balanced 3 East west directions can be misleading Point B which appears due east from A will be closer to the equator than A Thus the curvature found this way is smaller than the curvature of a circle of constant latitude except at the equator West can be exchanged for east in this discussion N is defined as the radius of curvature in the plane that is normal to both the surface of the ellipsoid at and the meridian passing through the specific point of interest References Edit a b c d e f Mamajek E E Prsa A Torres G et al 2015 IAU 2015 Resolution B3 on Recommended Nominal Conversion Constants for Selected Solar and Planetary Properties arXiv 1510 07674 astro ph SR a b c d e f g h i j Moritz H 1980 Geodetic Reference System 1980 by resolution of the XVII General Assembly of the IUGG in Canberra IAU 2006 General Assembly Result of the IAU Resolution votes Archived 2006 11 07 at the Wayback Machine Satellites Reveal A Mystery Of Large Change In Earth s Gravity Field Aug 1 2002 Goddard Space Flight Center NASA s Grace Finds Greenland Melting Faster Sees Sumatra Quake December 20 2005 Goddard Space Flight Center a b c d e f g h WGS84RPT tif Corel PHOTO PAINT PDF Retrieved 2018 10 17 Info PDF earth info nga mil Archived from the original PDF on 2020 08 04 Retrieved 2008 12 31 Equatorial Radius of the Earth Numerical Standards for Fundamental Astronomy Astronomical Constants Current Best Estimates CBEs IAU Division I Working Group 2012 Archived from the original on 2016 08 26 Retrieved 2016 08 10 Bowring B R October 1987 Notes on the curvature in the prime vertical section Survey Review 29 226 195 196 doi 10 1179 sre 1987 29 226 195 Bomford G 1952 Geodesy OCLC 489193198 a b c Lass Harry 1950 Vector and Tensor Analysis McGraw Hill Book Company Inc pp 71 77 a b c Torge Wolfgang 2001 Geodesy ISBN 9783110170726 a b c Moritz H March 2000 Geodetic Reference System 1980 Journal of Geodesy 74 1 128 133 Bibcode 2000JGeod 74 128 doi 10 1007 s001900050278 S2CID 195290884 a b Snyder J P 1987 Map Projections A Working Manual US Geological Survey Professional Paper 1395 p 16 17 Washington D C United States Government Printing Office a b c Discover TheWorld com Guam POINTS OF INTEREST Don t Miss Mariana Trench Guam discover theworld com 1960 01 23 Archived from the original on 2012 09 10 Retrieved 2013 09 16 a b Frederic Chambat Bernard Valette 2001 Mean radius mass and inertia for reference Earth models PDF Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 124 3 4 234 253 Bibcode 2001PEPI 124 237C doi 10 1016 S0031 9201 01 00200 X Archived from the original PDF on 30 July 2020 Retrieved 18 November 2017 Williams David R 2004 09 01 Earth Fact Sheet NASA retrieved 2007 03 17 Phillips Warren 2004 Mechanics of Flight John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 923 ISBN 0471334588 Aristotle On the Heavens Vol Book II 298 B Retrieved 5 November 2017 Drummond William 1817 On the Science of the Egyptians and Chaldeans Part I The Classical Journal 16 159 Clarke Alexander Ross Helmert Friedrich Robert 1911 Earth Figure of the In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 801 813 Eratosthenes the Greek Scientist Britannica com 2016 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Earth Figure of the Merrifield Michael R 2010 R displaystyle R oplus The Earth s Radius and exoplanets Sixty Symbols Brady Haran for the University of Nottingham Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Earth radius amp oldid 1123101663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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