001 Navigation
001 Navigation
NORTH
Equator – is a great TEMPORATE
circle 0º in Latitude ZONE
Lying midway between
the poles and its is 90º
on either poles
Tropics of Capricorn -
the declination
approximately 23º 27’S TORRID
of the celestial equator ZONE
North Atlantic
Ocean
South China
Pacific Ocean Sea
Indian Ocean
South Atlantic
Ocean
Antarctic Ocean
EARTH Small and Great Circles
LATITUDE – are lines contained
between the equator and the
latitudes parallel passing the place
or angular distance North or South
of the equator measured along the
meridian, that passes through the
place. Small Circles are circles
whose plane does not passes
through the earth’s center
NP: Lat: 81º.3N Long: 110º.8 W SP: Lat: 64º.9S Long: 138º.9 W
Magnetism
Is a fundamental physical
phenomenon associated with
magnetic fields and their effect upon
magnetic materials occurs both
naturally, as in a Lodestone and
artificially by induction. It is property
of a certain metal to attract or repel
items of like materials or certain other
metals.
LIKE POLES – REPEL
UNLIKE POLES - ATTRACT
3 Kinds of Magnetism
Transient magnetism – Magnetism
which is easily lost when the
magnetizing force is resume near
it
Permanent magnetism – magnetism
acquired when metal is placed
under steel, hammered or bent
which in a magnetic field.
AHEAD
DEAD
337º.50 NNW 2 PTS NNE 022º.50
326º.25 NWxN 3 PTS NExN 033º.75
315º.00 NW 4 PTS
NE 045º.00
303º.75 NWxW 5 PTS NExE 056º.25
292º.50 WNW 6 PTS ENE 067º.50
281º.25 WxN 7 PTS ExN 078º.75
270º.00 W 8 PTS
E 090º.00
258º.75 WxS 9 PTS ExS 101º.25
247º.50 WSW 10 PTS ESE 112º.50
236º.25 SWxW 11 PTS SExE 123º.75
225º.00 SW 12 PTS
SE 135º.00
213º.75 SWxS 13 PTS SExS 146º.25
202º. 50 SSW 14 PTS SSE 157º.50
ASTERN
DEAD
191º.25 SxW 15 PTS SxE 168º.75
Mechanical failure
USE THE MEMORY AID “CAN DEAD MAN VOTE TWICE AT ELECTIONS” (Compass,
Deviation, Magnetic, Variation, True; Add East). When converting compass heading to
true heading, add easterly deviations and variations and subtract westerly deviations
and variations.
Directions
HEADING – is the direction in which the ship actually heads and actually points or the
actual angle of the ship’s keel or fore and aft line is making with the meridian
05’
13º00’
Ancient Navigation
In the middle ages, the seaman’s
quadrant used a plumb line to
measure the angle between the
celestial body and the horizon.
The astrolabe is a hanging metal
ring with one or two openings
which projects the sun’s ray onto a
scale.
The cross staff or Jacob’s staff, has
a right-angle transom. that slides
until one end sights the horizon,
and the other the celestial body.
An improvement came in the 16th
century with the back-staff that
sighted the sun by projecting it’s
shadows on a vane, which served
as a horizon sight. It is not until the
18th century, when mirrors were
added, that these instruments
became the forerunners of the
modern sextant.
Establishing a Position
WP 5
WP 6
Types of Geo-Navigation
ELECTRONIC NAVIGATION – ship’s position is determined is based on the
principles or Radar Plotting and other electronic aides.
Ocean Navigation
Is that / are art
of science that
enables the a
navigator to
determine the
position of his
vessel and safely
conduct his ship
in the most
convenient,
practical and
shortest sea
route on the
earth’s surface
Gerardus Mercator
(March 5, 1512 – December 2, 1594)
was a Flemish cartographer. He was born in
Rupelmonde in East Flanders to parents from
Gangelt in the Duchy of Jülich. He lived in Duisburg
from 1552. He is remembered for the Mercator
chart named after him.
10’
05’
13º
00’
Longitude
The Longitude of a place is the angular measurement between its meridian and the meridian of Greenwich. The
angle is measured at the centre of the earth and is expressed in degrees, minutes and seconds (or in degrees,
minutes and decimals of a minute) from 0-180 East or West of the Greenwich Meridian. (UP AND DOWN THE
CHART)
Chart Work
55’ 113º00’ 05’ 10’ 114º15’
14º
15’
10’
05’
13º
00’
Latitude
The Latitude of a place is the angular measurement between its parallel of Latitude and the Equator. The angle is
measured at the centre of the earth and is expressed in degrees, minutes and seconds (or in degrees, minutes
and decimals of a minute) from 0-90 North or South from the Equator. (ACROSS THE CHART)
Chart Work
Distance
The distance scale is the scale of Latitude at the side of the chart, one minute of Latitude being equal to One sea
Mile. It is important to remember that this scale alters with the latitude, and that the distance should therefore be
measured off that portion of the Latitude scale, which is abreast the position which is to be recorded. The distance of
an object from the ship may be expressed in nautical miles (one nautical mile equals 1852 metres), in cables (one cable is
one-tenth of a nautical mile) or in metres. (A land mile = 1609 metres).
The advantage of the Mercator projection is that Latitude and Longitudes are at right angles and it
makes it easy to read the bearing. At small scale, the Mercator projection also gives true distances.
Unfortunately, because the distance in Longitudes are equal to the cosine of the Latitude, the
Mercator projection cannot really be used near the poles, where distortion reaches its maximum.
As an example. A Mercator projection at latitude 60º North gives a one-by-one degree rectangle
which is twice as high as wide (the cosine of 60º is 0.5)
The advantage of the Mercator projection is that Latitude and Longitudes are at right angles and it
makes it easy to read the bearing. At small scale, the Mercator projection also gives true distances.
Unfortunately, because the distance in Longitudes are equal to the cosine of the Latitude, the
Mercator projection cannot really be used near the poles, where distortion reaches its maximum.
As an example. A Mercator projection at latitude 60º North gives a one-by-one degree rectangle
which is twice as high as wide (the cosine of 60º is 0.5)
Chart Classification by Scale
WHAT IS A CHART PROJECTION – is a process of transferring points in the
surface of the the sphere or spheroid onto a plane or onto a developable plane
surface such as a cylinder or cone to produce a systematic drawing of lines
representing the parallels of latitudes and the meridians of longitudes of the
earth or portion of the earth
60s ≠ 1m 60s ≠ 1m
≠ 60s
1m ≠ 1 n. mi.
30s ≠ 0.5m 30s ≠ 0.50m
≠ 60s
15s ≠ 0.25m
Reading the Distance Scale
60s ≠ 1m 60s ≠ 1m
54s ≠ 0.9m
48s ≠ 0.8m 48s ≠ 0.8m
42s ≠ 0.7m
The optimum angular spread is 90° (two objects) or 120° (three objects). Moreover, bearings on
distant objects bring about more uncertainty in our position fix as the sector widens. Finally, if moving
fast you should not put any time between the bearings.
The next example features a nocturnal landfall on Willemsen Island - you are welcome to visit, but
mind the rocks. The position fix is plotted by taking bearings at two light-vessels as their lights appear
over the horizon. The variation is -1° and the ship's compass heading is 190°. Since we use our
steering compass for our bearings, we can use the same deviation table. That means a deviation of
-4° with which we can calculate (cc + var + dev = tc) the true courses.
Position Fix
Compass bearing on Will. N is 72°
· True course is 67°
· Plot LOP with time & true course
Dead reckoning is crucial since it provides an approximate position in the future. Each time a fix or running fix
is plotted, a vector representing the ordered course and speed originate from it. The direction of this course
line represents the ship's course, and the length represents the distance one would expect the ship to travel
in a given time. This extrapolation is used as a safety precaution: a predicted DR position that will place the
ship in water 1 metre deep should raise an eyebrow…
In the example above the true courses are plotted in the chart, and to assist the helmsman these course lines
are labelled with the corresponding compass courses.
Guidelines for Dead Reckoning
Plot a new course line
from each new fix or
running fix (single LOP).
Plot a DR position
every time course or WP 5
speed changes.
Plot a corrected DR
position if the predicted
course line proofed
wrong, and continue from WP 6
there.
Running Fix
Under some circumstances, such as low visibility, only one line of position can be obtained
at a time. In this event, a line of position obtained at an earlier time may be advanced to
the time of the later LOP. These two LOPs should not be parallel to each other; remember
that the optimal angular spread is 90°. The position obtained is termed a running fix
because the ship has “run” a certain distance during the time interval between the two
LOPs.
We obtain a single LOP on LANBY 1 and plot a
corresponding (same time) dead reckoning
0916 position. The estimated position is constructed by
drawing the shortest line between the DR and the
LOP: perpendicular.
Moon
♃ Jupiter
The sun has the advantage of being
visible during daytime. At night , it is
often difficult to sight the horizon. A full
♀ Venus moon, low over the horizon, will give a
good sight, so will Venus. Which is often
☿ Mercury visible before sunset. Mercury is often too
close to the sun in order to be sighted.
But the moon and the planet’s trajectory
Some Stars is complex and finding a LOP requires a
lot of calculation.
Celestial Navigation
The sextant is a fragile instrument that has to be calibrated properly. An error of 1 degree of
latitude represents 60 Nautical Miles on the chart. And Index error should be plotted by
calibration and added to the calculated elevation.
To find a celestial body elevation with the sextant. It has to be first set to estimated degree of
elevation. Then while holding it firmly, adjust the Vernier screw until the observed body
“kisses” the horizon. To make sure that the sextant is kept in the vertical plane, the navigator
should gently swing the sextant as a pendulum and read the shortest value.
Navigational Astronomy
The double-reflecting instrument (one that uses two mirrors to
bring the celestial body down to the horizon; hence the
navigator no longer has to try to look two places at once) was
apparently invented by Newton in 1699, though it was London
mathematician John Hadley who got the credit for first
producing one in 1731. To complicate matters, American
inventor Thomas Godfrey built one in 1730, but was not
acknowledged by the Royal Society. Hadley's second
instrument had an arc of 1/8 of a circle and hence was called
an octant; the sextant is 1/6 of a circle. Here is Bruce Bauer's
definition: "A sextant is, in essence, a machine for varying the
angle between two mirrors by precisely measurable numbers
of degrees to utilize the phenomenon that the angle of the
departing light ray will have been changed by double the angle
between the mirrors."
The star Polaris, often called the "North Star", is treated specially due
to its proximity to the north celestial pole. When navigating in the
northern hemisphere, special techniques can be used with Polaris to
determine latitude or gyrocompass error. The other 57 selected
stars have daily positions given in nautical almanacs, aiding
the navigator in efficiently performing observations on them. A second
group of 115 "tabulated stars" can also be used for celestial
navigation, but are often less familiar to the navigator and require
extra calculations.
1. Locate the Big Dipper in the northern sky. Knowing how to find the Big Dipper is easy due to its large
size and distinct shape. Depending upon the time of the year constellation of stars may be tipped in
different directions as it rotates around the polestar.
2. As shown in the diagram, locate the two stars that form the outer edge of the Big Dipper.
3. Draw an imaginary line straight through the two stars of the dipper edge and toward the Little Dipper.
The line will point very close to the handle of the Little Dipper.
4. The brightest star in the Little Dipper is at the end of its handle. This is the North Star.
5. Congratulations, you now know how to find the North Star, Polestar, or Lodestar.
Locating the Southern Cross