great circle sailing - ορισμός. Τι είναι το great circle sailing
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Τι (ποιος) είναι great circle sailing - ορισμός

INTERSECTION OF THE SPHERE AND A PLANE WHICH PASSES THROUGH THE CENTER POINT OF THE SPHERE
Orthodrome; Great Circle; Great Circle Route; Great circle, terrestrial; Great circles; Great-circle; Great Circle Mapper; Great disk
  • A great circle divides the sphere in two equal hemispheres.

great circle         
¦ noun a circle on the surface of a sphere which lies in a plane passing through the sphere's centre, especially as representing the shortest path between two given points on the sphere.
Great-circle navigation         
  • Figure 2. The great circle path between a node (an equator crossing) and an arbitrary point (φ,λ).
  • Figure 1. The great circle path between (&phi;<sub>1</sub>,&nbsp;&lambda;<sub>1</sub>) and (&phi;<sub>2</sub>,&nbsp;&lambda;<sub>2</sub>).
Great circle route; Great circle course; Great circle navigation; Orthodromic navigation
Great-circle navigation or orthodromic navigation (related to orthodromic course; from the Greek ορθóς, right angle, and δρóμος, path) is the practice of navigating a vessel (a ship or aircraft) along a great circle. Such routes yield the shortest distance between two points on the globe.
Canoe sailing         
SAILING BY FITTING A SAIL TO A CANOE
Canoe Sailing; Sailing canoe
Canoe sailing refers to the practice of fitting an Austronesian outrigger or Western canoe with sails.

Βικιπαίδεια

Great circle

In mathematics, a great circle or orthodrome is the circular intersection of a sphere and a plane passing through the sphere's center point.

Any arc of a great circle is a geodesic of the sphere, so that great circles in spherical geometry are the natural analog of straight lines in Euclidean space. For any pair of distinct non-antipodal points on the sphere, there is a unique great circle passing through both. (Every great circle through any point also passes through its antipodal point, so there are infinitely many great circles through two antipodal points.) The shorter of the two great-circle arcs between two distinct points on the sphere is called the minor arc, and is the shortest surface-path between them. Its arc length is the great-circle distance between the points (the intrinsic distance on a sphere), and is proportional to the measure of the central angle formed by the two points and the center of the sphere.

A great circle is the largest circle that can be drawn on any given sphere. Any diameter of any great circle coincides with a diameter of the sphere, and therefore every great circle is concentric with the sphere and shares the same radius. Any other circle of the sphere is called a small circle, and is the intersection of the sphere with a plane not passing through its center. Small circles are the spherical-geometry analog of circles in Euclidean space.

Every circle in Euclidean 3-space is a great circle of exactly one sphere.

The disk bounded by a great circle is called a great disk: it is the intersection of a ball and a plane passing through its center. In higher dimensions, the great circles on the n-sphere are the intersection of the n-sphere with 2-planes that pass through the origin in the Euclidean space Rn + 1.