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Meridian arc

In geodesy and navigation, a meridian arc is the curve between two points on the Earth's surface having the same longitude. The term may refer either to a segment of the meridian, or to its length.

The purpose of measuring meridian arcs is to determine a figure of the Earth. One or more measurements of meridian arcs can be used to infer the shape of the reference ellipsoid that best approximates the geoid in the region of the measurements. Measurements of meridian arcs at several latitudes along many meridians around the world can be combined in order to approximate a geocentric ellipsoid intended to fit the entire world.

The earliest determinations of the size of a spherical Earth required a single arc. Accurate survey work beginning in the 19th century required several arc measurements in the region the survey was to be conducted, leading to a proliferation of reference ellipsoids around the world. The latest determinations use astro-geodetic measurements and the methods of satellite geodesy to determine reference ellipsoids, especially the geocentric ellipsoids now used for global coordinate systems such as WGS 84 (see numerical expressions).

History of measurement

Early estimations of Earth's size are recorded from Greece in the 4th century BC, and from scholars at the caliph's House of Wisdom in the 9th century. The first realistic value was calculated by Alexandrian scientist Eratosthenes about 240 BC. He estimated that the meridian has a length of 252,000 stadia, with an error on the real value between -2.4% and +0.8% (assuming a value for the stadion between 155 and 160 metres).[1] Eratosthenes described his technique in a book entitled On the measure of the Earth, which has not been preserved. A similar method was used by Posidonius about 150 years later, and slightly better results were calculated in 827 by the arc measurement method,[2] attributed to the Caliph Al-Ma'mun.[citation needed]

Ellipsoidal Earth

Early literature uses the term oblate spheroid to describe a sphere "squashed at the poles". Modern literature uses the term ellipsoid of revolution in place of spheroid, although the qualifying words "of revolution" are usually dropped. An ellipsoid that is not an ellipsoid of revolution is called a triaxial ellipsoid. Spheroid and ellipsoid are used interchangeably in this article, with oblate implied if not stated.

17th and 18th centuries

Although it had been known since classical antiquity that the Earth was spherical, by the 17th century, evidence was accumulating that it was not a perfect sphere. In 1672, Jean Richer found the first evidence that gravity was not constant over the Earth (as it would be if the Earth were a sphere); he took a pendulum clock to Cayenne, French Guiana and found that it lost 2+12 minutes per day compared to its rate at Paris.[3][4] This indicated the acceleration of gravity was less at Cayenne than at Paris. Pendulum gravimeters began to be taken on voyages to remote parts of the world, and it was slowly discovered that gravity increases smoothly with increasing latitude, gravitational acceleration being about 0.5% greater at the geographical poles than at the Equator.

In 1687, Isaac Newton had published in the Principia as a proof that the Earth was an oblate spheroid of flattening equal to 1/230.[5] This was disputed by some, but not all, French scientists. A meridian arc of Jean Picard was extended to a longer arc by Giovanni Domenico Cassini and his son Jacques Cassini over the period 1684–1718.[6] The arc was measured with at least three latitude determinations, so they were able to deduce mean curvatures for the northern and southern halves of the arc, allowing a determination of the overall shape. The results indicated that the Earth was a prolate spheroid (with an equatorial radius less than the polar radius). To resolve the issue, the French Academy of Sciences (1735) proposed expeditions to Peru (Bouguer, Louis Godin, de La Condamine, Antonio de Ulloa, Jorge Juan) and Lapland (Maupertuis, Clairaut, Camus, Le Monnier, Abbe Outhier, Anders Celsius). The expedition to Peru is described in the French Geodesic Mission article and that to Lapland is described in the Torne Valley article. The resulting measurements at equatorial and polar latitudes confirmed that the Earth was best modelled by an oblate spheroid, supporting Newton.[6] However, by 1743, Clairaut's theorem had completely supplanted Newton's approach.

By the end of the century, Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Delambre had remeasured and extended the French arc from Dunkirk to the Mediterranean Sea (the meridian arc of Delambre and Méchain). It was divided into five parts by four intermediate determinations of latitude. By combining the measurements together with those for the arc of Peru, ellipsoid shape parameters were determined and the distance between the Equator and pole along the Paris Meridian was calculated as 5130762 toises as specified by the standard toise bar in Paris. Defining this distance as exactly 10000000 m led to the construction of a new standard metre bar as 0.5130762 toises.[6]: 22 

19th century

In the 19th century, many astronomers and geodesists were engaged in detailed studies of the Earth's curvature along different meridian arcs. The analyses resulted in a great many model ellipsoids such as Plessis 1817, Airy 1830, Bessel 1830, Everest 1830, and Clarke 1866.[7] A comprehensive list of ellipsoids is given under Earth ellipsoid.

The nautical mile

Historically a nautical mile was defined as the length of one minute of arc along a meridian of a spherical earth. An ellipsoid model leads to a variation of the nautical mile with latitude. This was resolved by defining the nautical mile to be exactly 1,852 metres. However, for all practical purposes, distances are measured from the latitude scale of charts. As the Royal Yachting Association says in its manual for day skippers: "1 (minute) of Latitude = 1 sea mile", followed by "For most practical purposes distance is measured from the latitude scale, assuming that one minute of latitude equals one nautical mile".[8]

Calculation

On a sphere, the meridian arc length is simply the circular arc length. On an ellipsoid of revolution, for short meridian arcs, their length can be approximated using the Earth's meridional radius of curvature and the circular arc formulation. For longer arcs, the length follows from the subtraction of two meridian distances, the distance from the equator to a point at a latitude φ. This is an important problem in the theory of map projections, particularly the transverse Mercator projection.

The main ellipsoidal parameters are, a, b, f, but in theoretical work it is useful to define extra parameters, particularly the eccentricity, e, and the third flattening n. Only two of these parameters are independent and there are many relations between them:

 

Definition

The meridian radius of curvature can be shown to be equal to:[9][10]

 

The arc length of an infinitesimal element of the meridian is dm = M(φ) (with φ in radians). Therefore, the meridian distance from the equator to latitude φ is

 

The distance formula is simpler when written in terms of the parametric latitude,

 

where tan β = (1 − f)tan φ and e2 = e2/1 − e2.

Even though latitude is normally confined to the range [−π/2,π/2], all the formulae given here apply to measuring distance around the complete meridian ellipse (including the anti-meridian). Thus the ranges of φ, β, and the rectifying latitude μ, are unrestricted.

Relation to elliptic integrals

The above integral is related to a special case of an incomplete elliptic integral of the third kind. In the notation of the online NIST handbook[11] (Section 19.2(ii)),

 

It may also be written in terms of incomplete elliptic integrals of the second kind (See the NIST handbook Section 19.6(iv)),

 

The calculation (to arbitrary precision) of the elliptic integrals and approximations are also discussed in the NIST handbook. These functions are also implemented in computer algebra programs such as Mathematica[12] and Maxima.[13]

Series expansions

The above integral may be expressed as an infinite truncated series by expanding the integrand in a Taylor series, performing the resulting integrals term by term, and expressing the result as a trigonometric series. In 1755, Leonhard Euler derived an expansion in the third eccentricity squared.[14]

Expansions in the eccentricity (e)

Delambre in 1799[15] derived a widely used expansion on e2,

 

where

 

Richard Rapp gives a detailed derivation of this result.[16]

Expansions in the third flattening (n)

Series with considerably faster convergence can be obtained by expanding in terms of the third flattening n instead of the eccentricity. They are related by

 

In 1837, Friedrich Bessel obtained one such series,[17] which was put into a simpler form by Helmert,[18][19]

 

with

 

Because n changes sign when a and b are interchanged, and because the initial factor 1/2(a + b) is constant under this interchange, half the terms in the expansions of H2k vanish.

The series can be expressed with either a or b as the initial factor by writing, for example,

 

and expanding the result as a series in n. Even though this results in more slowly converging series, such series are used in the specification for the transverse Mercator projection by the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency[20] and the Ordnance Survey of Great Britain.[21]

Series in terms of the parametric latitude

In 1825, Bessel[22] derived an expansion of the meridian distance in terms of the parametric latitude β in connection with his work on geodesics,

 

with

 

Because this series provides an expansion for the elliptic integral of the second kind, it can be used to write the arc length in terms of the geographic latitude as

 

Generalized series

The above series, to eighth order in eccentricity or fourth order in third flattening, provide millimetre accuracy. With the aid of symbolic algebra systems, they can easily be extended to sixth order in the third flattening which provides full double precision accuracy for terrestrial applications.

Delambre[15] and Bessel[22] both wrote their series in a form that allows them to be generalized to arbitrary order. The coefficients in Bessel's series can expressed particularly simply

 

where

 

and k!! is the double factorial, extended to negative values via the recursion relation: (−1)!! = 1 and (−3)!! = −1.

The coefficients in Helmert's series can similarly be expressed generally by

 

This result was conjectured by Friedrich Helmert[23] and proved by Kazushige Kawase.[24]

The factor (1 − 2k)(1 + 2k) results in poorer convergence of the series in terms of φ compared to the one in β.

Numerical expressions

The trigonometric series given above can be conveniently evaluated using Clenshaw summation. This method avoids the calculation of most of the trigonometric functions and allows the series to be summed rapidly and accurately. The technique can also be used to evaluate the difference m(φ1) − m(φ2) while maintaining high relative accuracy.

Substituting the values for the semi-major axis and eccentricity of the WGS84 ellipsoid gives

 

where φ(°) = φ/ is φ expressed in degrees (and similarly for β(°)).

On the ellipsoid the exact distance between parallels at φ1 and φ2 is m(φ1) − m(φ2). For WGS84 an approximate expression for the distance Δm between the two parallels at ±0.5° from the circle at latitude φ is given by

 

Quarter meridian

 
A quarter meridian or Earth quadrant.

The distance from the equator to the pole, the quarter meridian (analogous to the quarter-circle), also known as the Earth quadrant, is

 

It was part of the historical definition of the metre and of the nautical mile.

The quarter meridian can be expressed in terms of the complete elliptic integral of the second kind,

 

where   are the first and second eccentricities.

The quarter meridian is also given by the following generalized series:

 

(For the formula of c0, see section #Generalized series above.) This result was first obtained by James Ivory.[25]

The numerical expression for the quarter meridian on the WGS84 ellipsoid is

 

The polar Earth's circumference is simply four times quarter meridian:

 

The perimeter of a meridian ellipse can also be rewritten in the form of a rectifying circle perimeter, Cp = 2πMr. Therefore, the rectifying Earth radius is:

 

It can be evaluated as 6367449.146 m.

The inverse meridian problem for the ellipsoid

In some problems, we need to be able to solve the inverse problem: given m, determine φ. This may be solved by Newton's method, iterating

 

until convergence. A suitable starting guess is given by φ0 = μ where

 

is the rectifying latitude. Note that it there is no need to differentiate the series for m(φ), since the formula for the meridian radius of curvature M(φ) can be used instead.

Alternatively, Helmert's series for the meridian distance can be reverted to give[26][27]

 

where

 

Similarly, Bessel's series for m in terms of β can be reverted to give[28]

 

where

 

Adrien-Marie Legendre showed that the distance along a geodesic on an spheroid is the same as the distance along the perimeter of an ellipse.[29] For this reason, the expression for m in terms of β and its inverse given above play a key role in the solution of the geodesic problem with m replaced by s, the distance along the geodesic, and β replaced by σ, the arc length on the auxiliary sphere.[22][30] The requisite series extended to sixth order are given by Charles Karney,[31] Eqs. (17) & (21), with ε playing the role of n and τ playing the role of μ.

See also

References

  1. ^ Russo, Lucio (2004). The Forgotten Revolution. Berlin: Springer. p. 273-277.
  2. ^ Torge, W.; Müller, J. (2012). Geodesy. De Gruyter Textbook. De Gruyter. p. 5. ISBN 978-3-11-025000-8. Retrieved 2021-05-02.
  3. ^ Poynting, John Henry; Joseph John Thompson (1907). A Textbook of Physics, 4th Ed. London: Charles Griffin & Co. p. 20.
  4. ^ Victor F., Lenzen; Robert P. Multauf (1964). "Paper 44: Development of gravity pendulums in the 19th century". United States National Museum Bulletin 240: Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology reprinted in Bulletin of the Smithsonian Institution. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 307. Retrieved 2009-01-28.
  5. ^ Isaac Newton: Principia, Book III, Proposition XIX, Problem III, translated into English by Andrew Motte. A searchable modern translation is available at 17centurymaths. Search the following pdf file for 'spheroid'.
  6. ^ a b c Clarke, Alexander Ross (1880). Geodesy. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 2484948.. Freely available online at Archive.org and Forgotten Books (ISBN 9781440088650). In addition the book has been reprinted by Nabu Press (ISBN 978-1286804131), the first chapter covers the history of early surveys.
  7. ^ Clarke, Alexander Ross; James, Henry (1866). Comparisons of the standards of length of England, France, Belgium, Prussia, Russia, India, Australia, made at the Ordnance survey office, Southampton. London: G.E. Eyre and W. Spottiswoode for H.M. Stationery Office. pp. 281–87. OCLC 906501. Appendix on Figure of the Earth.
  8. ^ Hopkinson, Sara (2012). RYA day skipper handbook - sail. Hamble: The Royal Yachting Association. p. 76. ISBN 9781-9051-04949.
  9. ^ Rapp, R, (1991): Geometric Geodesy, Part I, §3.5.1, pp. 28–32.
  10. ^ Osborne, Peter (2013), The Mercator Projections, doi:10.5281/zenodo.35392 Section 5.6. This reference includes the derivation of curvature formulae from first principles and a proof of Meusnier's theorem. (Supplements: Maxima files and Latex code and figures)
  11. ^ F. W. J. Olver, D. W. Lozier, R. F. Boisvert, and C. W. Clark, editors, 2010, NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions (Cambridge University Press).
  12. ^ Mathematica guide: Elliptic Integrals
  13. ^ Maxima, 2009, A computer algebra system, version 5.20.1.
  14. ^ Euler, L. (1755). "Élémens de la trigonométrie sphéroïdique tirés de la méthode des plus grands et plus petits" [Elements of spheroidal trigonometry taken from the method of maxima and minima]. Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences de Berlin 1753 (in French). 9: 258–293. Figures.
  15. ^ a b Delambre, J. B. J. (1799): Méthodes Analytiques pour la Détermination d'un Arc du Méridien; précédées d'un mémoire sur le même sujet par A. M. Legendre, De L'Imprimerie de Crapelet, Paris, 72–73
  16. ^ Rapp, R, (1991), §3.6, pp. 36–40.
  17. ^ Bessel, F. W. (1837). "Bestimmung der Axen des elliptischen Rotationssphäroids, welches den vorhandenen Messungen von Meridianbögen der Erde am meisten entspricht" [Estimation of the axes of the ellipsoid through measurements of the meridian arc]. Astronomische Nachrichten (in German). 14 (333): 333–346. Bibcode:1837AN.....14..333B. doi:10.1002/asna.18370142301.
  18. ^ Helmert, F. R. (1880): Die mathematischen und physikalischen Theorieen der höheren Geodäsie, Einleitung und 1 Teil, Druck und Verlag von B. G. Teubner, Leipzig, § 1.7, pp. 44–48. English translation (by the Aeronautical Chart and Information Center, St. Louis) available at doi:10.5281/zenodo.32050
  19. ^ Krüger, L. (1912): Konforme Abbildung des Erdellipsoids in der Ebene. Royal Prussian Geodetic Institute, New Series 52, page 12
  20. ^ J. W. Hager, J.F. Behensky, and B.W. Drew, 1989. Defense Mapping Agency Technical Report TM 8358.2. The universal grids: Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) and Universal Polar Stereographic (UPS)
  21. ^ A guide to coordinate systems in Great Britain, Ordnance Survey of Great Britain.
  22. ^ a b c Bessel, F. W. (2010). "The calculation of longitude and latitude from geodesic measurements (1825)". Astron. Nachr. 331 (8): 852–861. arXiv:0908.1824. Bibcode:2010AN....331..852K. doi:10.1002/asna.201011352. S2CID 118760590. English translation of Astron. Nachr. 4, 241–254 (1825), §5.
  23. ^ Helmert (1880), §1.11
  24. ^ Kawase, K. (2011): A General Formula for Calculating Meridian Arc Length and its Application to Coordinate Conversion in the Gauss-Krüger Projection, Bulletin of the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan, 59, 1–13
  25. ^ Ivory, J. (1798). "A new series for the rectification of the ellipsis". Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. 4 (2): 177–190. doi:10.1017/s0080456800030817. S2CID 251572677.
  26. ^ Helmert (1880), §1.10
  27. ^ Adams, Oscar S (1921). Latitude Developments Connected With Geodesy and Cartography. US Coast and Geodetic Survey Special Publication No. 67. p. 127.
  28. ^ Helmert (1880), §5.6
  29. ^ Legendre, A. M. (1811). Exercices de Calcul Intégral sur Divers Ordres de Transcendantes et sur les Quadratures [Exercises in Integral Calculus] (in French). Paris: Courcier. p. 180. OCLC 312469983.
  30. ^ Helmert (1880), Chap. 5
  31. ^ Karney, C. F. F. (2013). "Algorithms for geodesics". Journal of Geodesy. 87 (1): 43–55. arXiv:1109.4448. Bibcode:2013JGeod..87...43K. doi:10.1007/s00190-012-0578-z. S2CID 119310141.   Addenda.

External links

  • Online computation of meridian arcs on different geodetic reference ellipsoids

meridian, geodesy, navigation, meridian, curve, between, points, earth, surface, having, same, longitude, term, refer, either, segment, meridian, length, purpose, measuring, meridian, arcs, determine, figure, earth, more, measurements, meridian, arcs, used, in. In geodesy and navigation a meridian arc is the curve between two points on the Earth s surface having the same longitude The term may refer either to a segment of the meridian or to its length The purpose of measuring meridian arcs is to determine a figure of the Earth One or more measurements of meridian arcs can be used to infer the shape of the reference ellipsoid that best approximates the geoid in the region of the measurements Measurements of meridian arcs at several latitudes along many meridians around the world can be combined in order to approximate a geocentric ellipsoid intended to fit the entire world The earliest determinations of the size of a spherical Earth required a single arc Accurate survey work beginning in the 19th century required several arc measurements in the region the survey was to be conducted leading to a proliferation of reference ellipsoids around the world The latest determinations use astro geodetic measurements and the methods of satellite geodesy to determine reference ellipsoids especially the geocentric ellipsoids now used for global coordinate systems such as WGS 84 see numerical expressions Contents 1 History of measurement 1 1 Ellipsoidal Earth 1 1 1 17th and 18th centuries 1 1 2 19th century 1 2 The nautical mile 2 Calculation 2 1 Definition 2 2 Relation to elliptic integrals 2 3 Series expansions 2 3 1 Expansions in the eccentricity e 2 3 2 Expansions in the third flattening n 2 3 3 Series in terms of the parametric latitude 2 3 4 Generalized series 2 3 5 Numerical expressions 3 Quarter meridian 4 The inverse meridian problem for the ellipsoid 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory of measurement EditFurther information History of geodesy and History of the metre Early estimations of Earth s size are recorded from Greece in the 4th century BC and from scholars at the caliph s House of Wisdom in the 9th century The first realistic value was calculated by Alexandrian scientist Eratosthenes about 240 BC He estimated that the meridian has a length of 252 000 stadia with an error on the real value between 2 4 and 0 8 assuming a value for the stadion between 155 and 160 metres 1 Eratosthenes described his technique in a book entitled On the measure of the Earth which has not been preserved A similar method was used by Posidonius about 150 years later and slightly better results were calculated in 827 by the arc measurement method 2 attributed to the Caliph Al Ma mun citation needed Ellipsoidal Earth Edit Main article Earth ellipsoid Determination Early literature uses the term oblate spheroid to describe a sphere squashed at the poles Modern literature uses the term ellipsoid of revolution in place of spheroid although the qualifying words of revolution are usually dropped An ellipsoid that is not an ellipsoid of revolution is called a triaxial ellipsoid Spheroid and ellipsoid are used interchangeably in this article with oblate implied if not stated 17th and 18th centuries Edit Although it had been known since classical antiquity that the Earth was spherical by the 17th century evidence was accumulating that it was not a perfect sphere In 1672 Jean Richer found the first evidence that gravity was not constant over the Earth as it would be if the Earth were a sphere he took a pendulum clock to Cayenne French Guiana and found that it lost 2 1 2 minutes per day compared to its rate at Paris 3 4 This indicated the acceleration of gravity was less at Cayenne than at Paris Pendulum gravimeters began to be taken on voyages to remote parts of the world and it was slowly discovered that gravity increases smoothly with increasing latitude gravitational acceleration being about 0 5 greater at the geographical poles than at the Equator In 1687 Isaac Newton had published in the Principia as a proof that the Earth was an oblate spheroid of flattening equal to 1 230 5 This was disputed by some but not all French scientists A meridian arc of Jean Picard was extended to a longer arc by Giovanni Domenico Cassini and his son Jacques Cassini over the period 1684 1718 6 The arc was measured with at least three latitude determinations so they were able to deduce mean curvatures for the northern and southern halves of the arc allowing a determination of the overall shape The results indicated that the Earth was a prolate spheroid with an equatorial radius less than the polar radius To resolve the issue the French Academy of Sciences 1735 proposed expeditions to Peru Bouguer Louis Godin de La Condamine Antonio de Ulloa Jorge Juan and Lapland Maupertuis Clairaut Camus Le Monnier Abbe Outhier Anders Celsius The expedition to Peru is described in the French Geodesic Mission article and that to Lapland is described in the Torne Valley article The resulting measurements at equatorial and polar latitudes confirmed that the Earth was best modelled by an oblate spheroid supporting Newton 6 However by 1743 Clairaut s theorem had completely supplanted Newton s approach By the end of the century Jean Baptiste Joseph Delambre had remeasured and extended the French arc from Dunkirk to the Mediterranean Sea the meridian arc of Delambre and Mechain It was divided into five parts by four intermediate determinations of latitude By combining the measurements together with those for the arc of Peru ellipsoid shape parameters were determined and the distance between the Equator and pole along the Paris Meridian was calculated as 5130 762 toises as specified by the standard toise bar in Paris Defining this distance as exactly 10000 000 m led to the construction of a new standard metre bar as 0 5130762 toises 6 22 19th century Edit In the 19th century many astronomers and geodesists were engaged in detailed studies of the Earth s curvature along different meridian arcs The analyses resulted in a great many model ellipsoids such as Plessis 1817 Airy 1830 Bessel 1830 Everest 1830 and Clarke 1866 7 A comprehensive list of ellipsoids is given under Earth ellipsoid The nautical mile Edit Historically a nautical mile was defined as the length of one minute of arc along a meridian of a spherical earth An ellipsoid model leads to a variation of the nautical mile with latitude This was resolved by defining the nautical mile to be exactly 1 852 metres However for all practical purposes distances are measured from the latitude scale of charts As the Royal Yachting Association says in its manual for day skippers 1 minute of Latitude 1 sea mile followed by For most practical purposes distance is measured from the latitude scale assuming that one minute of latitude equals one nautical mile 8 Calculation EditSee also Latitude Meridian arc On a sphere the meridian arc length is simply the circular arc length On an ellipsoid of revolution for short meridian arcs their length can be approximated using the Earth s meridional radius of curvature and the circular arc formulation For longer arcs the length follows from the subtraction of two meridian distances the distance from the equator to a point at a latitude f This is an important problem in the theory of map projections particularly the transverse Mercator projection The main ellipsoidal parameters are a b f but in theoretical work it is useful to define extra parameters particularly the eccentricity e and the third flattening n Only two of these parameters are independent and there are many relations between them f a b a e 2 f 2 f n a b a b f 2 f b a 1 f a 1 e 2 e 2 4 n 1 n 2 displaystyle begin aligned f amp frac a b a qquad e 2 f 2 f qquad n frac a b a b frac f 2 f b amp a 1 f a sqrt 1 e 2 qquad e 2 frac 4n 1 n 2 end aligned Definition Edit The meridian radius of curvature can be shown to be equal to 9 10 M f a 1 e 2 1 e 2 sin 2 f 3 2 displaystyle M varphi frac a 1 e 2 left 1 e 2 sin 2 varphi right frac 3 2 The arc length of an infinitesimal element of the meridian is dm M f df with f in radians Therefore the meridian distance from the equator to latitude f is m f 0 f M f d f a 1 e 2 0 f 1 e 2 sin 2 f 3 2 d f displaystyle begin aligned m varphi amp int 0 varphi M varphi d varphi amp a 1 e 2 int 0 varphi left 1 e 2 sin 2 varphi right frac 3 2 d varphi end aligned The distance formula is simpler when written in terms of the parametric latitude m f b 0 b 1 e 2 sin 2 b d b displaystyle m varphi b int 0 beta sqrt 1 e 2 sin 2 beta d beta where tan b 1 f tan f and e 2 e2 1 e2 Even though latitude is normally confined to the range p 2 p 2 all the formulae given here apply to measuring distance around the complete meridian ellipse including the anti meridian Thus the ranges of f b and the rectifying latitude m are unrestricted Relation to elliptic integrals Edit Further information Ellipse Arc length The above integral is related to a special case of an incomplete elliptic integral of the third kind In the notation of the online NIST handbook 11 Section 19 2 ii m f a 1 e 2 P f e 2 e displaystyle m varphi a left 1 e 2 right Pi varphi e 2 e It may also be written in terms of incomplete elliptic integrals of the second kind See the NIST handbook Section 19 6 iv m f a E f e e 2 sin f cos f 1 e 2 sin 2 f a E f e d 2 d f 2 E f e b E b i e displaystyle begin aligned m varphi amp a left E varphi e frac e 2 sin varphi cos varphi sqrt 1 e 2 sin 2 varphi right amp a left E varphi e frac d 2 d varphi 2 E varphi e right amp bE beta ie end aligned The calculation to arbitrary precision of the elliptic integrals and approximations are also discussed in the NIST handbook These functions are also implemented in computer algebra programs such as Mathematica 12 and Maxima 13 Series expansions Edit The above integral may be expressed as an infinite truncated series by expanding the integrand in a Taylor series performing the resulting integrals term by term and expressing the result as a trigonometric series In 1755 Leonhard Euler derived an expansion in the third eccentricity squared 14 Expansions in the eccentricity e Edit Delambre in 1799 15 derived a widely used expansion on e2 m f b 2 a D 0 f D 2 sin 2 f D 4 sin 4 f D 6 sin 6 f D 8 sin 8 f displaystyle m varphi frac b 2 a left D 0 varphi D 2 sin 2 varphi D 4 sin 4 varphi D 6 sin 6 varphi D 8 sin 8 varphi cdots right where D 0 1 3 4 e 2 45 64 e 4 175 256 e 6 11025 16384 e 8 D 2 3 8 e 2 15 32 e 4 525 1024 e 6 2205 4096 e 8 D 4 15 256 e 4 105 1024 e 6 2205 16384 e 8 D 6 35 3072 e 6 105 4096 e 8 D 8 315 131072 e 8 displaystyle begin aligned D 0 amp 1 tfrac 3 4 e 2 tfrac 45 64 e 4 tfrac 175 256 e 6 tfrac 11025 16384 e 8 cdots 5mu D 2 amp tfrac 3 8 e 2 tfrac 15 32 e 4 tfrac 525 1024 e 6 tfrac 2205 4096 e 8 cdots 5mu D 4 amp tfrac 15 256 e 4 tfrac 105 1024 e 6 tfrac 2205 16384 e 8 cdots 5mu D 6 amp tfrac 35 3072 e 6 tfrac 105 4096 e 8 cdots 5mu D 8 amp tfrac 315 131072 e 8 cdots end aligned Richard Rapp gives a detailed derivation of this result 16 Expansions in the third flattening n Edit Series with considerably faster convergence can be obtained by expanding in terms of the third flattening n instead of the eccentricity They are related by e 2 4 n 1 n 2 displaystyle e 2 frac 4n 1 n 2 In 1837 Friedrich Bessel obtained one such series 17 which was put into a simpler form by Helmert 18 19 m f a b 2 H 0 f H 2 sin 2 f H 4 sin 4 f H 6 sin 6 f H 8 sin 8 f displaystyle m varphi frac a b 2 left H 0 varphi H 2 sin 2 varphi H 4 sin 4 varphi H 6 sin 6 varphi H 8 sin 8 varphi cdots right with H 0 1 1 4 n 2 1 64 n 4 H 2 3 2 n 3 16 n 3 H 6 35 48 n 3 H 4 15 16 n 2 15 64 n 4 H 8 315 512 n 4 displaystyle begin aligned H 0 amp 1 tfrac 1 4 n 2 tfrac 1 64 n 4 cdots H 2 amp tfrac 3 2 n tfrac 3 16 n 3 cdots amp H 6 amp tfrac 35 48 n 3 cdots H 4 amp tfrac 15 16 n 2 tfrac 15 64 n 4 cdots qquad amp H 8 amp tfrac 315 512 n 4 cdots end aligned Because n changes sign when a and b are interchanged and because the initial factor 1 2 a b is constant under this interchange half the terms in the expansions of H2k vanish The series can be expressed with either a or b as the initial factor by writing for example 1 2 a b a 1 n a 1 n n 2 n 3 n 4 displaystyle tfrac 1 2 a b frac a 1 n a 1 n n 2 n 3 n 4 cdots and expanding the result as a series in n Even though this results in more slowly converging series such series are used in the specification for the transverse Mercator projection by the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency 20 and the Ordnance Survey of Great Britain 21 Series in terms of the parametric latitude Edit In 1825 Bessel 22 derived an expansion of the meridian distance in terms of the parametric latitude b in connection with his work on geodesics m f a b 2 B 0 b B 2 sin 2 b B 4 sin 4 b B 6 sin 6 b B 8 sin 8 b displaystyle m varphi frac a b 2 left B 0 beta B 2 sin 2 beta B 4 sin 4 beta B 6 sin 6 beta B 8 sin 8 beta cdots right with B 0 1 1 4 n 2 1 64 n 4 H 0 B 2 1 2 n 1 16 n 3 B 6 1 48 n 3 B 4 1 16 n 2 1 64 n 4 B 8 5 512 n 4 displaystyle begin aligned B 0 amp 1 tfrac 1 4 n 2 tfrac 1 64 n 4 cdots H 0 B 2 amp tfrac 1 2 n tfrac 1 16 n 3 cdots amp B 6 amp tfrac 1 48 n 3 cdots B 4 amp tfrac 1 16 n 2 tfrac 1 64 n 4 cdots qquad amp B 8 amp tfrac 5 512 n 4 cdots end aligned Because this series provides an expansion for the elliptic integral of the second kind it can be used to write the arc length in terms of the geographic latitude as m f a b 2 B 0 f B 2 sin 2 f B 4 sin 4 f B 6 sin 6 f B 8 sin 8 f 2 n sin 2 f 1 2 n cos 2 f n 2 displaystyle m varphi frac a b 2 left B 0 varphi B 2 sin 2 varphi B 4 sin 4 varphi B 6 sin 6 varphi B 8 sin 8 varphi cdots frac 2n sin 2 varphi sqrt 1 2n cos 2 varphi n 2 right Generalized series Edit The above series to eighth order in eccentricity or fourth order in third flattening provide millimetre accuracy With the aid of symbolic algebra systems they can easily be extended to sixth order in the third flattening which provides full double precision accuracy for terrestrial applications Delambre 15 and Bessel 22 both wrote their series in a form that allows them to be generalized to arbitrary order The coefficients in Bessel s series can expressed particularly simply B 2 k c 0 if k 0 c k k if k gt 0 displaystyle B 2k begin cases c 0 amp text if k 0 5px dfrac c k k amp text if k gt 0 end cases where c k j 0 2 j 3 2 j 2 k 3 2 j 2 j 2 k n k 2 j displaystyle c k sum j 0 infty frac 2j 3 2j 2k 3 2j 2j 2k n k 2j and k is the double factorial extended to negative values via the recursion relation 1 1 and 3 1 The coefficients in Helmert s series can similarly be expressed generally by H 2 k 1 k 1 2 k 1 2 k B 2 k displaystyle H 2k 1 k 1 2k 1 2k B 2k This result was conjectured by Friedrich Helmert 23 and proved by Kazushige Kawase 24 The factor 1 2k 1 2k results in poorer convergence of the series in terms of f compared to the one in b Numerical expressions Edit The trigonometric series given above can be conveniently evaluated using Clenshaw summation This method avoids the calculation of most of the trigonometric functions and allows the series to be summed rapidly and accurately The technique can also be used to evaluate the difference m f1 m f2 while maintaining high relative accuracy Substituting the values for the semi major axis and eccentricity of the WGS84 ellipsoid gives m f 111 132 952 55 f 16 038 509 sin 2 f 16 833 sin 4 f 0 022 sin 6 f 0 000 03 sin 8 f metres 111 132 952 55 b 5 346 170 sin 2 b 1 122 sin 4 b 0 001 sin 6 b 0 5 10 6 sin 8 b metres displaystyle begin aligned m varphi amp left 111 132 952 55 varphi circ 16 038 509 sin 2 varphi 16 833 sin 4 varphi 0 022 sin 6 varphi 0 000 03 sin 8 varphi right mbox metres amp left 111 132 952 55 beta circ 5 346 170 sin 2 beta 1 122 sin 4 beta 0 001 sin 6 beta 0 5 times 10 6 sin 8 beta right mbox metres end aligned where f f 1 is f expressed in degrees and similarly for b On the ellipsoid the exact distance between parallels at f1 and f2 is m f1 m f2 For WGS84 an approximate expression for the distance Dm between the two parallels at 0 5 from the circle at latitude f is given by D m 111 133 560 cos 2 f metres displaystyle Delta m 111 133 560 cos 2 varphi mbox metres Quarter meridian EditThis section may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in German May 2021 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 738 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Erdquadrant see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Erdquadrant to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation See also Ellipse Circumference A quarter meridian or Earth quadrant The distance from the equator to the pole the quarter meridian analogous to the quarter circle also known as the Earth quadrant is m p m p 2 displaystyle m mathrm p m left frac pi 2 right It was part of the historical definition of the metre and of the nautical mile The quarter meridian can be expressed in terms of the complete elliptic integral of the second kind m p a E e b E i e displaystyle m mathrm p aE e bE ie where e e displaystyle e e are the first and second eccentricities The quarter meridian is also given by the following generalized series m p p a b 4 c 0 p a b 4 j 0 2 j 3 2 j 2 n 2 j displaystyle m mathrm p frac pi a b 4 c 0 frac pi a b 4 sum j 0 infty left frac 2j 3 2j right 2 n 2j For the formula of c0 see section Generalized series above This result was first obtained by James Ivory 25 The numerical expression for the quarter meridian on the WGS84 ellipsoid is m p 10 001 965 729 m displaystyle m mathrm p 10 001 965 729 mbox m The polar Earth s circumference is simply four times quarter meridian C p 4 m p displaystyle C p 4m p The perimeter of a meridian ellipse can also be rewritten in the form of a rectifying circle perimeter Cp 2pMr Therefore the rectifying Earth radius is M r 0 5 a b c 0 displaystyle M r 0 5 a b c 0 It can be evaluated as 6367 449 146 m The inverse meridian problem for the ellipsoid EditIn some problems we need to be able to solve the inverse problem given m determine f This may be solved by Newton s method iterating f i 1 f i m f i m M f i displaystyle varphi i 1 varphi i frac m varphi i m M varphi i until convergence A suitable starting guess is given by f0 m where m p 2 m m p displaystyle mu frac pi 2 frac m m mathrm p is the rectifying latitude Note that it there is no need to differentiate the series for m f since the formula for the meridian radius of curvature M f can be used instead Alternatively Helmert s series for the meridian distance can be reverted to give 26 27 f m H 2 sin 2 m H 4 sin 4 m H 6 sin 6 m H 8 sin 8 m displaystyle varphi mu H 2 sin 2 mu H 4 sin 4 mu H 6 sin 6 mu H 8 sin 8 mu cdots where H 2 3 2 n 27 32 n 3 H 6 151 96 n 3 H 4 21 16 n 2 55 32 n 4 H 8 1097 512 n 4 displaystyle begin aligned H 2 amp tfrac 3 2 n tfrac 27 32 n 3 cdots amp H 6 amp tfrac 151 96 n 3 cdots H 4 amp tfrac 21 16 n 2 tfrac 55 32 n 4 cdots qquad amp H 8 amp tfrac 1097 512 n 4 cdots end aligned Similarly Bessel s series for m in terms of b can be reverted to give 28 b m B 2 sin 2 m B 4 sin 4 m B 6 sin 6 m B 8 sin 8 m displaystyle beta mu B 2 sin 2 mu B 4 sin 4 mu B 6 sin 6 mu B 8 sin 8 mu cdots where B 2 1 2 n 9 32 n 3 B 6 29 96 n 3 B 4 5 16 n 2 37 96 n 4 B 8 539 1536 n 4 displaystyle begin aligned B 2 amp tfrac 1 2 n tfrac 9 32 n 3 cdots amp B 6 amp tfrac 29 96 n 3 cdots B 4 amp tfrac 5 16 n 2 tfrac 37 96 n 4 cdots qquad amp B 8 amp tfrac 539 1536 n 4 cdots end aligned Adrien Marie Legendre showed that the distance along a geodesic on an spheroid is the same as the distance along the perimeter of an ellipse 29 For this reason the expression for m in terms of b and its inverse given above play a key role in the solution of the geodesic problem with m replaced by s the distance along the geodesic and b replaced by s the arc length on the auxiliary sphere 22 30 The requisite series extended to sixth order are given by Charles Karney 31 Eqs 17 amp 21 with e playing the role of n and t playing the role of m See also EditHistory of geodesy Geodesy Reference ellipsoid Paris meridian West Europe Africa Meridian arc French Geodesic Mission Struve Geodetic Arc Torne Valley French Geodesic Mission Rectifying latitude Geodesics on an ellipsoidReferences Edit Russo Lucio 2004 The Forgotten Revolution Berlin Springer p 273 277 Torge W Muller J 2012 Geodesy De Gruyter Textbook De Gruyter p 5 ISBN 978 3 11 025000 8 Retrieved 2021 05 02 Poynting John Henry Joseph John Thompson 1907 A Textbook of Physics 4th Ed London Charles Griffin amp Co p 20 Victor F Lenzen Robert P Multauf 1964 Paper 44 Development of gravity pendulums in the 19th century United States National Museum Bulletin 240 Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology reprinted in Bulletin of the Smithsonian Institution Washington Smithsonian Institution Press p 307 Retrieved 2009 01 28 Isaac Newton Principia Book III Proposition XIX Problem III translated into English by Andrew Motte A searchable modern translation is available at 17centurymaths Search the following pdf file for spheroid a b c Clarke Alexander Ross 1880 Geodesy Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 2484948 Freely available online at Archive org and Forgotten Books ISBN 9781440088650 In addition the book has been reprinted by Nabu Press ISBN 978 1286804131 the first chapter covers the history of early surveys Clarke Alexander Ross James Henry 1866 Comparisons of the standards of length of England France Belgium Prussia Russia India Australia made at the Ordnance survey office Southampton London G E Eyre and W Spottiswoode for H M Stationery Office pp 281 87 OCLC 906501 Appendix on Figure of the Earth Hopkinson Sara 2012 RYA day skipper handbook sail Hamble The Royal Yachting Association p 76 ISBN 9781 9051 04949 Rapp R 1991 Geometric Geodesy Part I 3 5 1 pp 28 32 Osborne Peter 2013 The Mercator Projections doi 10 5281 zenodo 35392 Section 5 6 This reference includes the derivation of curvature formulae from first principles and a proof of Meusnier s theorem Supplements Maxima files and Latex code and figures F W J Olver D W Lozier R F Boisvert and C W Clark editors 2010 NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions Cambridge University Press Mathematica guide Elliptic Integrals Maxima 2009 A computer algebra system version 5 20 1 Euler L 1755 Elemens de la trigonometrie spheroidique tires de la methode des plus grands et plus petits Elements of spheroidal trigonometry taken from the method of maxima and minima Memoires de l Academie Royale des Sciences de Berlin 1753 in French 9 258 293 Figures a b Delambre J B J 1799 Methodes Analytiques pour la Determination d un Arc du Meridien precedees d un memoire sur le meme sujet par A M Legendre De L Imprimerie de Crapelet Paris 72 73 Rapp R 1991 3 6 pp 36 40 Bessel F W 1837 Bestimmung der Axen des elliptischen Rotationsspharoids welches den vorhandenen Messungen von Meridianbogen der Erde am meisten entspricht Estimation of the axes of the ellipsoid through measurements of the meridian arc Astronomische Nachrichten in German 14 333 333 346 Bibcode 1837AN 14 333B doi 10 1002 asna 18370142301 Helmert F R 1880 Die mathematischen und physikalischen Theorieen der hoheren Geodasie Einleitung und 1 Teil Druck und Verlag von B G Teubner Leipzig 1 7 pp 44 48 English translation by the Aeronautical Chart and Information Center St Louis available at doi 10 5281 zenodo 32050 Kruger L 1912 Konforme Abbildung des Erdellipsoids in der Ebene Royal Prussian Geodetic Institute New Series 52 page 12 J W Hager J F Behensky and B W Drew 1989 Defense Mapping Agency Technical Report TM 8358 2 The universal grids Universal Transverse Mercator UTM and Universal Polar Stereographic UPS A guide to coordinate systems in Great Britain Ordnance Survey of Great Britain a b c Bessel F W 2010 The calculation of longitude and latitude from geodesic measurements 1825 Astron Nachr 331 8 852 861 arXiv 0908 1824 Bibcode 2010AN 331 852K doi 10 1002 asna 201011352 S2CID 118760590 English translation of Astron Nachr 4 241 254 1825 5 Helmert 1880 1 11 Kawase K 2011 A General Formula for Calculating Meridian Arc Length and its Application to Coordinate Conversion in the Gauss Kruger Projection Bulletin of the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan 59 1 13 Ivory J 1798 A new series for the rectification of the ellipsis Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 4 2 177 190 doi 10 1017 s0080456800030817 S2CID 251572677 Helmert 1880 1 10 Adams Oscar S 1921 Latitude Developments Connected With Geodesy and Cartography US Coast and Geodetic Survey Special Publication No 67 p 127 Helmert 1880 5 6 Legendre A M 1811 Exercices de Calcul Integral sur Divers Ordres de Transcendantes et sur les Quadratures Exercises in Integral Calculus in French Paris Courcier p 180 OCLC 312469983 Helmert 1880 Chap 5 Karney C F F 2013 Algorithms for geodesics Journal of Geodesy 87 1 43 55 arXiv 1109 4448 Bibcode 2013JGeod 87 43K doi 10 1007 s00190 012 0578 z S2CID 119310141 Addenda External links EditOnline computation of meridian arcs on different geodetic reference ellipsoids Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meridian arc amp oldid 1120389221, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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