CONS 127 Lecture 4: CONS 127 - Space, Orbits, and the International Space Station Jan 18 2018

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This method did become problematic if we wanted to go far. Dead reckoning: dropping something at the front of the boat and then counting how long it takes to reach the end of the boat. And if you know your speed over a period a time, you can work out your distance. But over a long period of time, it gets harder and harder. We can follow a star and work out how high it gets and then use this star as a reference. So we get latitude from observing one single star. Longitude is harders so as a result, the chronometer was made. This was the device that could measure time. And time is the key. i. e. if we know the relative time between where we are and greenwich, then we can assess the distance between these two points. In the ship, the captain has two chronometers. He needs to know the local time and the time at greenwich.

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