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Consortium for Mathematics and its Applications

Product ID: 99811
Supplementary Print
Undergraduate

Determining the Size and Shape of the Earth (UMAP)

Author: Richard J. Pulskamp


There is a long history of attempts to measure the size and shape of the Earth. During the 17th century, theoretical work predicted its shape to be that of an oblate spheroid. Later empirical work challenged this result. In the 18th century, to settle the question, measurements of arcs of meridian were made at various locations. This Module shows how, under the assumption that its shape is well-approximated as an ellipsoid of revolution, both the size and shape of the Earth can be deduced from the known lengths of arcs of meridian measured at various latitudes.

Table of Contents

1. INTRODUCTION

2. THE EARTH AS A SPHERE

3. LENGTH OF AN ARC OF A GREAT CIRCLE

4. EARLY MEASUREMENTS OF THE EARTH

5. LENGTH OF AN ARC OF AN ELLIPSE

6. ARCS ON THE EARTH
6.1 Latitude

7. TRIANGULATION

8. DETERMINING THE SHAPE OF THE EARTH

9. FURTHER ARC MEASUREMENTS

10. ANALYSIS

11. SOLUTIONS TO THE EXERCISES

12. APPENDIX

REFERENCES

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


©2012 by COMAP, Inc.
UMAP Module
30 pages

Mathematics Topics:

Precalculus & Trigonometry , Calculus

Application Areas:

Physical Sciences , Geodesy

Prerequisites:

Sophomore mathematics majors

Plane trigonometry, first-year calculus, scalar productof vectors, and the method of least squares.

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