From Sails To Satellites (H) (Hardcover)


When Hipparchus invented the coordinate system of latitude and longitude, a rough latitude could be found, at least on land, with solar measurements, but it would take another two thousand years before longitude could be measured accurately at sea. Indeed, before the perfection of the sextant and chronometer in the 18th century, sailors navigated on long voyages without knowing where they were for much of the time. In 1991, in contrast, single-seater pest-spraying aircraft in the Sahara Desert routinely fixed their position with an accuracy of thirty yards using the Navstar Global Positioning System (GPS). The Navstar system, which employs 18 satellites around the earth, even boasts hand-held models costing less than a thousand dollars, within the budget of most weekend sailors.
From Sails to Satellites traces the history of navigational science from the earliest systems of dead reckoning, to astrolabes and cross-staffs, to the ultra-modern guidance systems used by planes, ships, and missiles. Williams recounts the two-hundred-year Great Pursuit of Longitude, ranging from 1598, when Philip III of Spain offered lavish prizes for its discovery (and ironically brushed off Galileo, the only person alive who was on the right track); to 1759, when the most famous marine chronometer of all time, chronometer No. 4 built by John Harrison, a Yorkshire carpenter turned clockmaker, accurately measured longitude; to the development of the sextant, the first practical way to measure longitude. Williams discusses how in the 19th century great strides were made in the perfection of the pivoted needle compass, in nautical astronomy, in tidal prediction, and in marine lights, but it was with the Wright Brother's successful flight that navigation once again moved to the front ranks of science. He reveals how even as the first airplane flew in Kitty Hawk, scientists in America and Italy were developing radio direction-finding, while in Germany Anschutz-Kaempfe was developing the first gyrocompass and Hulsmeyer was preparing to file the first radar patent. And Williams brings the story completely up to the moment with descriptions of radar, inertial navigation systems, lasers, and much more.
A fascinating narrative which skillfully interweaves the threads of science, trade, exploration, and warfare, From Sails to Satellites is written with care and insight by an author who has more than 50 years' experience of and curiosity about the human need to know position and course. It will intrigue anyone who has ever navigated a sailboat or a Cesna, and readers interested in the history of science and technology.

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Product Description

When Hipparchus invented the coordinate system of latitude and longitude, a rough latitude could be found, at least on land, with solar measurements, but it would take another two thousand years before longitude could be measured accurately at sea. Indeed, before the perfection of the sextant and chronometer in the 18th century, sailors navigated on long voyages without knowing where they were for much of the time. In 1991, in contrast, single-seater pest-spraying aircraft in the Sahara Desert routinely fixed their position with an accuracy of thirty yards using the Navstar Global Positioning System (GPS). The Navstar system, which employs 18 satellites around the earth, even boasts hand-held models costing less than a thousand dollars, within the budget of most weekend sailors.
From Sails to Satellites traces the history of navigational science from the earliest systems of dead reckoning, to astrolabes and cross-staffs, to the ultra-modern guidance systems used by planes, ships, and missiles. Williams recounts the two-hundred-year Great Pursuit of Longitude, ranging from 1598, when Philip III of Spain offered lavish prizes for its discovery (and ironically brushed off Galileo, the only person alive who was on the right track); to 1759, when the most famous marine chronometer of all time, chronometer No. 4 built by John Harrison, a Yorkshire carpenter turned clockmaker, accurately measured longitude; to the development of the sextant, the first practical way to measure longitude. Williams discusses how in the 19th century great strides were made in the perfection of the pivoted needle compass, in nautical astronomy, in tidal prediction, and in marine lights, but it was with the Wright Brother's successful flight that navigation once again moved to the front ranks of science. He reveals how even as the first airplane flew in Kitty Hawk, scientists in America and Italy were developing radio direction-finding, while in Germany Anschutz-Kaempfe was developing the first gyrocompass and Hulsmeyer was preparing to file the first radar patent. And Williams brings the story completely up to the moment with descriptions of radar, inertial navigation systems, lasers, and much more.
A fascinating narrative which skillfully interweaves the threads of science, trade, exploration, and warfare, From Sails to Satellites is written with care and insight by an author who has more than 50 years' experience of and curiosity about the human need to know position and course. It will intrigue anyone who has ever navigated a sailboat or a Cesna, and readers interested in the history of science and technology.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Oxford UniversityPress

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Release date

November 1992

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

Authors

Dimensions

245 x 190mm (L x W)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

319

ISBN-13

978-0-19-856387-7

Barcode

9780198563877

Categories

LSN

0-19-856387-6



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