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Figure of the Earth

In geodesy, the figure of the Earth is the size and shape used to model planet Earth. The kind of figure depends on application, including the precision needed for the model. A spherical Earth is a well-known historical approximation that is satisfactory for geography, astronomy and many other purposes. Several models with greater accuracy (including ellipsoid) have been developed so that coordinate systems can serve the precise needs of navigation, surveying, cadastre, land use, and various other concerns.

Motivation edit

Earth's topographic surface is apparent with its variety of land forms and water areas. This topographic surface is generally the concern of topographers, hydrographers, and geophysicists. While it is the surface on which Earth measurements are made, mathematically modeling it while taking the irregularities into account would be extremely complicated.

The Pythagorean concept of a spherical Earth offers a simple surface that is easy to deal with mathematically. Many astronomical and navigational computations use a sphere to model the Earth as a close approximation. However, a more accurate figure is needed for measuring distances and areas on the scale beyond the purely local. Better approximations can be made by modeling the entire surface as an oblate spheroid, using spherical harmonics to approximate the geoid, or modeling a region with a best-fit reference ellipsoid.

For surveys of small areas, a planar (flat) model of Earth's surface suffices because the local topography overwhelms the curvature. Plane-table surveys are made for relatively small areas without considering the size and shape of the entire Earth. A survey of a city, for example, might be conducted this way.

 
Topographic view of Earth relative to Earth's center (instead of to mean sea level, as in common topographic maps)

By the late 1600s, serious effort was devoted to modeling the Earth as an ellipsoid, beginning with Jean Picard's measurement of a degree of arc along the Paris meridian. Improved maps and better measurement of distances and areas of national territories motivated these early attempts. Surveying instrumentation and techniques improved over the ensuing centuries. Models for the figure of the Earth improved in step.

In the mid- to late 20th century, research across the geosciences contributed to drastic improvements in the accuracy of the figure of the Earth. The primary utility of this improved accuracy was to provide geographical and gravitational data for the inertial guidance systems of ballistic missiles. This funding also drove the expansion of geoscientific disciplines, fostering the creation and growth of various geoscience departments at many universities.[1] These developments benefited many civilian pursuits as well, such as weather and communication satellite control and GPS location-finding, which would be impossible without highly accurate models for the figure of the Earth.

Models edit

The models for the figure of the Earth vary in the way they are used, in their complexity, and in the accuracy with which they represent the size and shape of the Earth.

Sphere edit

 
A view across a 20-km-wide bay in the coast of Spain. The curvature of the Earth is evident in the horizon across the image, and the bases of the buildings on the far shore are below that horizon and hidden by the sea.

The simplest model for the shape of the entire Earth is a sphere. The Earth's radius is the distance from Earth's center to its surface, about 6,371 km (3,959 mi). While "radius" normally is a characteristic of perfect spheres, the Earth deviates from spherical by only a third of a percent, sufficiently close to treat it as a sphere in many contexts and justifying the term "the radius of the Earth".

The concept of a spherical Earth dates back to around the 6th century BC,[2] but remained a matter of philosophical speculation until the 3rd century BC. The first scientific estimation of the radius of the Earth was given by Eratosthenes about 240 BC, with estimates of the accuracy of Eratosthenes's measurement ranging from −1% to 15%.

The Earth is only approximately spherical, so no single value serves as its natural radius. Distances from points on the surface to the center range from 6,353 km (3,948 mi) to 6,384 km (3,967 mi). Several different ways of modeling the Earth as a sphere each yield a mean radius of 6,371 km (3,959 mi). Regardless of the model, any radius falls between the polar minimum of about 6,357 km (3,950 mi) and the equatorial maximum of about 6,378 km (3,963 mi). The difference 21 km (13 mi) correspond to the polar radius being approximately 0.3% shorter than the equatorial radius.

Ellipsoid of revolution edit

 
An oblate spheroid, highly exaggerated relative to the actual Earth
 
A scale diagram of the oblateness of the 2003 IERS reference ellipsoid, with north at the top. The outer edge of the dark blue line is an ellipse with the same eccentricity as that of Earth. For comparison, the light blue circle within has a diameter equal to the ellipse's minor axis. The red curve represents the Karman line 100 km (62 mi) above sea level, while the yellow band denotes the altitude range of the ISS in low Earth orbit.

Since the Earth is flattened at the poles and bulges at the Equator, geodesy represents the figure of the Earth as an oblate spheroid. The oblate spheroid, or oblate ellipsoid, is an ellipsoid of revolution obtained by rotating an ellipse about its shorter axis. It is the regular geometric shape that most nearly approximates the shape of the Earth. A spheroid describing the figure of the Earth or other celestial body is called a reference ellipsoid. The reference ellipsoid for Earth is called an Earth ellipsoid.

An ellipsoid of revolution is uniquely defined by two quantities. Several conventions for expressing the two quantities are used in geodesy, but they are all equivalent to and convertible with each other:

  • Equatorial radius   (called semimajor axis), and polar radius   (called semiminor axis);
  •   and eccentricity  ;
  •   and flattening  .

Eccentricity and flattening are different ways of expressing how squashed the ellipsoid is. When flattening appears as one of the defining quantities in geodesy, generally it is expressed by its reciprocal. For example, in the WGS 84 spheroid used by today's GPS systems, the reciprocal of the flattening   is set to be exactly 298.257223563.

The difference between a sphere and a reference ellipsoid for Earth is small, only about one part in 300. Historically, flattening was computed from grade measurements. Nowadays, geodetic networks and satellite geodesy are used. In practice, many reference ellipsoids have been developed over the centuries from different surveys. The flattening value varies slightly from one reference ellipsoid to another, reflecting local conditions and whether the reference ellipsoid is intended to model the entire Earth or only some portion of it.

A sphere has a single radius of curvature, which is simply the radius of the sphere. More complex surfaces have radii of curvature that vary over the surface. The radius of curvature describes the radius of the sphere that best approximates the surface at that point. Oblate ellipsoids have a constant radius of curvature east to west along parallels, if a graticule is drawn on the surface, but varying curvature in any other direction. For an oblate ellipsoid, the polar radius of curvature   is larger than the equatorial

 

because the pole is flattened: the flatter the surface, the larger the sphere must be to approximate it. Conversely, the ellipsoid's north–south radius of curvature at the equator   is smaller than the polar

 

where   is the distance from the center of the ellipsoid to the equator (semi-major axis), and   is the distance from the center to the pole. (semi-minor axis)

Geoid edit

 
Geoid undulation in false color, shaded relief and vertical exaggeration (10000 scale factor).
 
Geoid undulation in false color, to scale.

It was stated earlier that measurements are made on the apparent or topographic surface of the Earth and it has just been explained that computations are performed on an ellipsoid. One other surface is involved in geodetic measurement: the geoid. In geodetic surveying, the computation of the geodetic coordinates of points is commonly performed on a reference ellipsoid closely approximating the size and shape of the Earth in the area of the survey. The actual measurements made on the surface of the Earth with certain instruments are however referred to the geoid. The ellipsoid is a mathematically defined regular surface with specific dimensions. The geoid, on the other hand, coincides with that surface to which the oceans would conform over the entire Earth if free to adjust to the combined effect of the Earth's mass attraction (gravitation) and the centrifugal force of the Earth's rotation. As a result of the uneven distribution of the Earth's mass, the geoidal surface is irregular and, since the ellipsoid is a regular surface, the separations between the two, referred to as geoid undulations, geoid heights, or geoid separations, will be irregular as well.

The geoid is a surface along which the gravity potential is everywhere equal and to which the direction of gravity is always perpendicular (see equipotential surface). The latter is particularly important because optical instruments containing gravity-reference leveling devices are commonly used to make geodetic measurements. When properly adjusted, the vertical axis of the instrument coincides with the direction of gravity and is, therefore, perpendicular to the geoid. The angle between the plumb line which is perpendicular to the geoid (sometimes called "the vertical") and the perpendicular to the ellipsoid (sometimes called "the ellipsoidal normal") is defined as the deflection of the vertical. It has two components: an east–west and a north–south component.[3]

Other shapes edit

Modern geodesy tends to retain the ellipsoid of revolution as a reference ellipsoid and treat triaxiality and pear shape as a part of the geoid figure: they are represented by the spherical harmonic coefficients   and  , respectively, corresponding to degree and order numbers 2.2 for the triaxiality and 3.0 for the pear shape.

Triaxiality (equatorial eccentricity) edit

The possibility that the Earth's equator is better characterized as an ellipse rather than a circle and therefore that the ellipsoid is triaxial has been a matter of scientific inquiry for many years.[4][5] Modern technological developments have furnished new and rapid methods for data collection and, since the launch of Sputnik 1, orbital data have been used to investigate the theory of ellipticity.[3] More recent results indicate a 70 m difference between the two equatorial major and minor axes of inertia, with the larger semidiameter pointing to 15° W longitude (and also 180-degree away).[6][7]

Pear shape edit

The theory of a slightly pear-shaped Earth arose and gained publicity after the first artificial satellites observed long periodic orbital variations, indicating a depression at the South Pole and a bulge of the same degree at the North Pole. This theory contends that the northern middle latitudes are slightly flattened and the southern middle latitudes correspondingly bulged.[3] U.S. Vanguard 1 satellite data from 1958 confirms that the southern equatorial bulge is greater than that of the north, which is corroborated by the South Pole's sea level being lower than that of the north.[8] A pear-shaped Earth had first been theorized in 1498 by Christopher Columbus, based on his incorrect readings of the North Star's diurnal motion.[9]

John A. O'Keefe and co-authors are credited with the discovery that the Earth had a significant third degree zonal spherical harmonic in its gravitational field using Vanguard 1 satellite data.[10] Based on further satellite geodesy data, Desmond King-Hele refined the estimate to a 45 m difference between north and south polar radii, owing to a 19 m "stem" rising in the North Pole and a 26 m depression in the South Pole.[11][12] The polar asymmetry is small, though: it is about a thousand times smaller than the Earth's flattening and even smaller than the geoidal undulation in some regions of the Earth.[13]

Local approximations edit

Simpler local approximations are possible.

Local tangent plane edit

 
The local tangent plane.

The local tangent plane is appropriate for very small distances.

Osculating sphere edit

 
Ellipsoid and osculating sphere.

The best local spherical approximation to the ellipsoid in the vicinity of a given point is the Earth's osculating sphere. Its radius equals Earth's Gaussian radius of curvature, and its radial direction coincides with the geodetic normal direction. The center of the osculating sphere is offset from the center of the ellipsoid, but is at the center of curvature for the given point on the ellipsoid surface. This concept aids the interpretation of terrestrial and planetary radio occultation refraction measurements and in some navigation and surveillance applications.[14][15]

Earth rotation and Earth's interior edit

Determining the exact figure of the Earth is not only a geometric task of geodesy, but also has geophysical considerations. According to theoretical arguments by Isaac Newton, Leonhard Euler, and others, a body having a uniform density of 5515 kg/m3 that rotates like the Earth should have a flattening of 1:229. This can be concluded without any information about the composition of Earth's interior.[16] However, the measured flattening is 1:298.25, which is closer to a sphere and a strong argument that Earth's core is extremely compact. Therefore, the density must be a function of the depth, ranging from 2600 kg/m3 at the surface (rock density of granite, etc.), up to 13 000 kg/m3 within the inner core.[17]

Global and regional gravity field edit

Also with implications for the physical exploration of the Earth's interior is the gravitational field, which is the net effect of gravitation (due to mass attraction) and centrifugal force (due to rotation). It can be measured very accurately at the surface and remotely by satellites. True vertical generally does not correspond to theoretical vertical (deflection ranges up to 50") because topography and all geological masses disturb the gravitational field. Therefore, the gross structure of the Earth's crust and mantle can be determined by geodetic-geophysical models of the subsurface.

See also edit

History

References edit

  1. ^ Cloud, John (2000). "Crossing the Olentangy River: The Figure of the Earth and the Military-Industrial-Academic Complex, 1947–1972". Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics. 31 (3): 371–404. Bibcode:2000SHPMP..31..371C. doi:10.1016/S1355-2198(00)00017-4.
  2. ^ Dicks, D.R. (1970). Early Greek Astronomy to Aristotle. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. pp. 72–198. ISBN 978-0-8014-0561-7.
  3. ^ a b c Defense Mapping Agency (1983). Geodesy for the Layman (Report). United States Air Force.
  4. ^ Heiskanen, W. A. (1962). "Is the Earth a triaxial ellipsoid?". Journal of Geophysical Research. 67 (1): 321–327. Bibcode:1962JGR....67..321H. doi:10.1029/JZ067i001p00321.
  5. ^ Burša, Milan (1993). "Parameters of the Earth's tri-axial level ellipsoid". Studia Geophysica et Geodaetica. 37 (1): 1–13. Bibcode:1993StGG...37....1B. doi:10.1007/BF01613918. S2CID 128674427.
  6. ^ Torge & Müller (2012) Geodesy, De Gruyter, p.100
  7. ^ Marchenko, A.N. (2009): Current estimation of the Earth’s mechanical and geometrical para meters. In Sideris, M.G., ed. (2009): Observing our changing Earth. IAG Symp. Proceed. 133., pp. 473–481. DOI:10.1007/978-3-540-85426-5_57
  8. ^ Tyson, Neil deGrasse (2014) [2007]. Death By Black Hole: And Other Cosmic Quandaries (1st ed.). New York: W. W. Norton. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-393-06224-3. OCLC 70265574.
  9. ^ Morison, Samuel Eliot (1991) [1942]. Admiral of the Ocean Sea: A Life of Christopher Columbus. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. p. 557. ISBN 978-0-316-58478-4. OCLC 1154365097.
  10. ^ O’KEEFE, J. A., ECKEIS, A., & SQUIRES, R. K. (1959). Vanguard Measurements Give Pear-Shaped Component of Earth’s Figure. Science, 129(3348), 565–566. doi:10.1126/science.129.3348.565
  11. ^ KING-HELE, D. G.; COOK, G. E. (1973). "Refining the Earth's Pear Shape". Nature. 246 (5428). Springer Nature: 86–88. Bibcode:1973Natur.246...86K. doi:10.1038/246086a0. ISSN 0028-0836. S2CID 4260099.
  12. ^ King-Hele, D. (1967). The Shape of the Earth. Scientific American, 217(4), 67-80. [1]
  13. ^ Günter Seeber (2008), Satellite Geodesy, Walter de Gruyter, 608 pages. [2]
  14. ^ Williams, Paul; Last, David (3–7 November 2003). On Loran-C Time-Difference to Co-ordinate Converters (PDF). International Loran Association (ILA) – 32nd Annual Convention and Technical Symposium. Boulder, Colorado. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.594.6212.
  15. ^ Razin, Sheldon (Fall 1967). "Explicit (Noniterative) Loran Solution". Navigation: Journal of the Institute of Navigation. 14 (3): 265–269. doi:10.1002/j.2161-4296.1967.tb02208.x.
  16. ^ Heine, George (2013). "Euler and the Flattening of the Earth". Math Horizons. 21 (1). Mathematical Association of America: 25–29. doi:10.4169/mathhorizons.21.1.25. S2CID 126412032.
  17. ^ Dziewonski, A. M.; Anderson, D. L. (1981), "Preliminary reference Earth model" (PDF), Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 25 (4): 297–356, Bibcode:1981PEPI...25..297D, doi:10.1016/0031-9201(81)90046-7, ISSN 0031-9201
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Defense Mapping Agency (1983). Geodesy for the Layman (Report). United States Air Force.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Reference Ellipsoids (ScanEx)
  • Changes in Earth shape due to climate changes 22 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  • Jos Leys "The shape of Planet Earth"

figure, earth, historical, development, concept, spherical, earth, flat, earth, geodesy, figure, earth, size, shape, used, model, planet, earth, kind, figure, depends, application, including, precision, needed, model, spherical, earth, well, known, historical,. For the historical development of the concept see Spherical Earth and Flat Earth In geodesy the figure of the Earth is the size and shape used to model planet Earth The kind of figure depends on application including the precision needed for the model A spherical Earth is a well known historical approximation that is satisfactory for geography astronomy and many other purposes Several models with greater accuracy including ellipsoid have been developed so that coordinate systems can serve the precise needs of navigation surveying cadastre land use and various other concerns Contents 1 Motivation 2 Models 2 1 Sphere 2 2 Ellipsoid of revolution 2 3 Geoid 2 4 Other shapes 2 4 1 Triaxiality equatorial eccentricity 2 4 2 Pear shape 2 5 Local approximations 2 5 1 Local tangent plane 2 5 2 Osculating sphere 3 Earth rotation and Earth s interior 4 Global and regional gravity field 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksMotivation editEarth s topographic surface is apparent with its variety of land forms and water areas This topographic surface is generally the concern of topographers hydrographers and geophysicists While it is the surface on which Earth measurements are made mathematically modeling it while taking the irregularities into account would be extremely complicated The Pythagorean concept of a spherical Earth offers a simple surface that is easy to deal with mathematically Many astronomical and navigational computations use a sphere to model the Earth as a close approximation However a more accurate figure is needed for measuring distances and areas on the scale beyond the purely local Better approximations can be made by modeling the entire surface as an oblate spheroid using spherical harmonics to approximate the geoid or modeling a region with a best fit reference ellipsoid For surveys of small areas a planar flat model of Earth s surface suffices because the local topography overwhelms the curvature Plane table surveys are made for relatively small areas without considering the size and shape of the entire Earth A survey of a city for example might be conducted this way nbsp Topographic view of Earth relative to Earth s center instead of to mean sea level as in common topographic maps By the late 1600s serious effort was devoted to modeling the Earth as an ellipsoid beginning with Jean Picard s measurement of a degree of arc along the Paris meridian Improved maps and better measurement of distances and areas of national territories motivated these early attempts Surveying instrumentation and techniques improved over the ensuing centuries Models for the figure of the Earth improved in step In the mid to late 20th century research across the geosciences contributed to drastic improvements in the accuracy of the figure of the Earth The primary utility of this improved accuracy was to provide geographical and gravitational data for the inertial guidance systems of ballistic missiles This funding also drove the expansion of geoscientific disciplines fostering the creation and growth of various geoscience departments at many universities 1 These developments benefited many civilian pursuits as well such as weather and communication satellite control and GPS location finding which would be impossible without highly accurate models for the figure of the Earth Models editThe models for the figure of the Earth vary in the way they are used in their complexity and in the accuracy with which they represent the size and shape of the Earth Sphere edit Main article Spherical Earth Further information Earth radius and Earth s circumference nbsp A view across a 20 km wide bay in the coast of Spain The curvature of the Earth is evident in the horizon across the image and the bases of the buildings on the far shore are below that horizon and hidden by the sea The simplest model for the shape of the entire Earth is a sphere The Earth s radius is the distance from Earth s center to its surface about 6 371 km 3 959 mi While radius normally is a characteristic of perfect spheres the Earth deviates from spherical by only a third of a percent sufficiently close to treat it as a sphere in many contexts and justifying the term the radius of the Earth The concept of a spherical Earth dates back to around the 6th century BC 2 but remained a matter of philosophical speculation until the 3rd century BC The first scientific estimation of the radius of the Earth was given by Eratosthenes about 240 BC with estimates of the accuracy of Eratosthenes s measurement ranging from 1 to 15 The Earth is only approximately spherical so no single value serves as its natural radius Distances from points on the surface to the center range from 6 353 km 3 948 mi to 6 384 km 3 967 mi Several different ways of modeling the Earth as a sphere each yield a mean radius of 6 371 km 3 959 mi Regardless of the model any radius falls between the polar minimum of about 6 357 km 3 950 mi and the equatorial maximum of about 6 378 km 3 963 mi The difference 21 km 13 mi correspond to the polar radius being approximately 0 3 shorter than the equatorial radius Ellipsoid of revolution edit nbsp An oblate spheroid highly exaggerated relative to the actual Earth nbsp A scale diagram of the oblateness of the 2003 IERS reference ellipsoid with north at the top The outer edge of the dark blue line is an ellipse with the same eccentricity as that of Earth For comparison the light blue circle within has a diameter equal to the ellipse s minor axis The red curve represents the Karman line 100 km 62 mi above sea level while the yellow band denotes the altitude range of the ISS in low Earth orbit Main article Earth ellipsoid Further information Reference ellipsoid Since the Earth is flattened at the poles and bulges at the Equator geodesy represents the figure of the Earth as an oblate spheroid The oblate spheroid or oblate ellipsoid is an ellipsoid of revolution obtained by rotating an ellipse about its shorter axis It is the regular geometric shape that most nearly approximates the shape of the Earth A spheroid describing the figure of the Earth or other celestial body is called a reference ellipsoid The reference ellipsoid for Earth is called an Earth ellipsoid An ellipsoid of revolution is uniquely defined by two quantities Several conventions for expressing the two quantities are used in geodesy but they are all equivalent to and convertible with each other Equatorial radius a displaystyle a nbsp called semimajor axis and polar radius b displaystyle b nbsp called semiminor axis a displaystyle a nbsp and eccentricity e displaystyle e nbsp a displaystyle a nbsp and flattening f displaystyle f nbsp Eccentricity and flattening are different ways of expressing how squashed the ellipsoid is When flattening appears as one of the defining quantities in geodesy generally it is expressed by its reciprocal For example in the WGS 84 spheroid used by today s GPS systems the reciprocal of the flattening 1 f displaystyle 1 f nbsp is set to be exactly 298 257223 563 The difference between a sphere and a reference ellipsoid for Earth is small only about one part in 300 Historically flattening was computed from grade measurements Nowadays geodetic networks and satellite geodesy are used In practice many reference ellipsoids have been developed over the centuries from different surveys The flattening value varies slightly from one reference ellipsoid to another reflecting local conditions and whether the reference ellipsoid is intended to model the entire Earth or only some portion of it A sphere has a single radius of curvature which is simply the radius of the sphere More complex surfaces have radii of curvature that vary over the surface The radius of curvature describes the radius of the sphere that best approximates the surface at that point Oblate ellipsoids have a constant radius of curvature east to west along parallels if a graticule is drawn on the surface but varying curvature in any other direction For an oblate ellipsoid the polar radius of curvature r p displaystyle r p nbsp is larger than the equatorial r p a 2 b displaystyle r p frac a 2 b nbsp because the pole is flattened the flatter the surface the larger the sphere must be to approximate it Conversely the ellipsoid s north south radius of curvature at the equator r e displaystyle r e nbsp is smaller than the polar r e b 2 a displaystyle r e frac b 2 a nbsp where a displaystyle a nbsp is the distance from the center of the ellipsoid to the equator semi major axis and b displaystyle b nbsp is the distance from the center to the pole semi minor axis Geoid edit Main article Geoid nbsp Geoid undulation in false color shaded relief and vertical exaggeration 10000 scale factor nbsp Geoid undulation in false color to scale It was stated earlier that measurements are made on the apparent or topographic surface of the Earth and it has just been explained that computations are performed on an ellipsoid One other surface is involved in geodetic measurement the geoid In geodetic surveying the computation of the geodetic coordinates of points is commonly performed on a reference ellipsoid closely approximating the size and shape of the Earth in the area of the survey The actual measurements made on the surface of the Earth with certain instruments are however referred to the geoid The ellipsoid is a mathematically defined regular surface with specific dimensions The geoid on the other hand coincides with that surface to which the oceans would conform over the entire Earth if free to adjust to the combined effect of the Earth s mass attraction gravitation and the centrifugal force of the Earth s rotation As a result of the uneven distribution of the Earth s mass the geoidal surface is irregular and since the ellipsoid is a regular surface the separations between the two referred to as geoid undulations geoid heights or geoid separations will be irregular as well The geoid is a surface along which the gravity potential is everywhere equal and to which the direction of gravity is always perpendicular see equipotential surface The latter is particularly important because optical instruments containing gravity reference leveling devices are commonly used to make geodetic measurements When properly adjusted the vertical axis of the instrument coincides with the direction of gravity and is therefore perpendicular to the geoid The angle between the plumb line which is perpendicular to the geoid sometimes called the vertical and the perpendicular to the ellipsoid sometimes called the ellipsoidal normal is defined as the deflection of the vertical It has two components an east west and a north south component 3 Other shapes edit Modern geodesy tends to retain the ellipsoid of revolution as a reference ellipsoid and treat triaxiality and pear shape as a part of the geoid figure they are represented by the spherical harmonic coefficients C 22 S 22 displaystyle C 22 S 22 nbsp and C 30 displaystyle C 30 nbsp respectively corresponding to degree and order numbers 2 2 for the triaxiality and 3 0 for the pear shape Triaxiality equatorial eccentricity edit The possibility that the Earth s equator is better characterized as an ellipse rather than a circle and therefore that the ellipsoid is triaxial has been a matter of scientific inquiry for many years 4 5 Modern technological developments have furnished new and rapid methods for data collection and since the launch of Sputnik 1 orbital data have been used to investigate the theory of ellipticity 3 More recent results indicate a 70 m difference between the two equatorial major and minor axes of inertia with the larger semidiameter pointing to 15 W longitude and also 180 degree away 6 7 Pear shape edit The theory of a slightly pear shaped Earth arose and gained publicity after the first artificial satellites observed long periodic orbital variations indicating a depression at the South Pole and a bulge of the same degree at the North Pole This theory contends that the northern middle latitudes are slightly flattened and the southern middle latitudes correspondingly bulged 3 U S Vanguard 1 satellite data from 1958 confirms that the southern equatorial bulge is greater than that of the north which is corroborated by the South Pole s sea level being lower than that of the north 8 A pear shaped Earth had first been theorized in 1498 by Christopher Columbus based on his incorrect readings of the North Star s diurnal motion 9 John A O Keefe and co authors are credited with the discovery that the Earth had a significant third degree zonal spherical harmonic in its gravitational field using Vanguard 1 satellite data 10 Based on further satellite geodesy data Desmond King Hele refined the estimate to a 45 m difference between north and south polar radii owing to a 19 m stem rising in the North Pole and a 26 m depression in the South Pole 11 12 The polar asymmetry is small though it is about a thousand times smaller than the Earth s flattening and even smaller than the geoidal undulation in some regions of the Earth 13 Local approximations edit Simpler local approximations are possible Local tangent plane edit nbsp The local tangent plane The local tangent plane is appropriate for very small distances Osculating sphere edit nbsp Ellipsoid and osculating sphere The best local spherical approximation to the ellipsoid in the vicinity of a given point is the Earth s osculating sphere Its radius equals Earth s Gaussian radius of curvature and its radial direction coincides with the geodetic normal direction The center of the osculating sphere is offset from the center of the ellipsoid but is at the center of curvature for the given point on the ellipsoid surface This concept aids the interpretation of terrestrial and planetary radio occultation refraction measurements and in some navigation and surveillance applications 14 15 Earth rotation and Earth s interior editMain article Clairaut s theorem Further information Structure of Earth and Theoretical gravity Determining the exact figure of the Earth is not only a geometric task of geodesy but also has geophysical considerations According to theoretical arguments by Isaac Newton Leonhard Euler and others a body having a uniform density of 5515 kg m3 that rotates like the Earth should have a flattening of 1 229 This can be concluded without any information about the composition of Earth s interior 16 However the measured flattening is 1 298 25 which is closer to a sphere and a strong argument that Earth s core is extremely compact Therefore the density must be a function of the depth ranging from 2600 kg m3 at the surface rock density of granite etc up to 13 000 kg m3 within the inner core 17 Global and regional gravity field editMain article Gravity of Earth Also with implications for the physical exploration of the Earth s interior is the gravitational field which is the net effect of gravitation due to mass attraction and centrifugal force due to rotation It can be measured very accurately at the surface and remotely by satellites True vertical generally does not correspond to theoretical vertical deflection ranges up to 50 because topography and all geological masses disturb the gravitational field Therefore the gross structure of the Earth s crust and mantle can be determined by geodetic geophysical models of the subsurface See also editClairaut s theorem EGM96 Gravity formula Gravity of Earth Horizon Distance and Curvature Meridian arc Theoretical gravity History Pierre Bouguer Earth s circumference History Earth s radius History Flat Earth Friedrich Robert Helmert History of geodesy History of the metre Meridian arc History Seconds pendulumReferences edit Cloud John 2000 Crossing the Olentangy River The Figure of the Earth and the Military Industrial Academic Complex 1947 1972 Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 31 3 371 404 Bibcode 2000SHPMP 31 371C doi 10 1016 S1355 2198 00 00017 4 Dicks D R 1970 Early Greek Astronomy to Aristotle Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press pp 72 198 ISBN 978 0 8014 0561 7 a b c Defense Mapping Agency 1983 Geodesy for the Layman Report United States Air Force Heiskanen W A 1962 Is the Earth a triaxial ellipsoid Journal of Geophysical Research 67 1 321 327 Bibcode 1962JGR 67 321H doi 10 1029 JZ067i001p00321 Bursa Milan 1993 Parameters of the Earth s tri axial level ellipsoid Studia Geophysica et Geodaetica 37 1 1 13 Bibcode 1993StGG 37 1B doi 10 1007 BF01613918 S2CID 128674427 Torge amp Muller 2012 Geodesy De Gruyter p 100 Marchenko A N 2009 Current estimation of the Earth s mechanical and geometrical para meters In Sideris M G ed 2009 Observing our changing Earth IAG Symp Proceed 133 pp 473 481 DOI 10 1007 978 3 540 85426 5 57 Tyson Neil deGrasse 2014 2007 Death By Black Hole And Other Cosmic Quandaries 1st ed New York W W Norton p 52 ISBN 978 0 393 06224 3 OCLC 70265574 Morison Samuel Eliot 1991 1942 Admiral of the Ocean Sea A Life of Christopher Columbus Boston Little Brown and Company p 557 ISBN 978 0 316 58478 4 OCLC 1154365097 O KEEFE J A ECKEIS A amp SQUIRES R K 1959 Vanguard Measurements Give Pear Shaped Component of Earth s Figure Science 129 3348 565 566 doi 10 1126 science 129 3348 565 KING HELE D G COOK G E 1973 Refining the Earth s Pear Shape Nature 246 5428 Springer Nature 86 88 Bibcode 1973Natur 246 86K doi 10 1038 246086a0 ISSN 0028 0836 S2CID 4260099 King Hele D 1967 The Shape of the Earth Scientific American 217 4 67 80 1 Gunter Seeber 2008 Satellite Geodesy Walter de Gruyter 608 pages 2 Williams Paul Last David 3 7 November 2003 On Loran C Time Difference to Co ordinate Converters PDF International Loran Association ILA 32nd Annual Convention and Technical Symposium Boulder Colorado CiteSeerX 10 1 1 594 6212 Razin Sheldon Fall 1967 Explicit Noniterative Loran Solution Navigation Journal of the Institute of Navigation 14 3 265 269 doi 10 1002 j 2161 4296 1967 tb02208 x Heine George 2013 Euler and the Flattening of the Earth Math Horizons 21 1 Mathematical Association of America 25 29 doi 10 4169 mathhorizons 21 1 25 S2CID 126412032 Dziewonski A M Anderson D L 1981 Preliminary reference Earth model PDF Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 25 4 297 356 Bibcode 1981PEPI 25 297D doi 10 1016 0031 9201 81 90046 7 ISSN 0031 9201 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Defense Mapping Agency 1983 Geodesy for the Layman Report United States Air Force Further reading editGuy Bomford Geodesy Oxford 1952 and 1980 Guy Bomford Determination of the European geoid by means of vertical deflections Rpt of Comm 14 IUGG 10th Gen Ass Rome 1954 Karl Ledersteger and Gottfried Gerstbach Die horizontale Isostasie Das isostatische Geoid 31 Ordnung Geowissenschaftliche Mitteilungen Band 5 TU Wien 1975 Helmut Moritz and Bernhard Hofmann Physical Geodesy Springer Wien amp New York 2005 Geodesy for the Layman Defense Mapping Agency St Louis 1983 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Curvature of the Earth Reference Ellipsoids PCI Geomatics Reference Ellipsoids ScanEx Changes in Earth shape due to climate changes Archived 22 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Jos Leys The shape of Planet Earth Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Figure of the Earth amp oldid 1220557926, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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