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Graphics of World Aviation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2016
Extract
To claim that communications have unified our world is by now to voice a truism. Within the span of a generation we have thrust headlong into an age of transition and readjustment, the definitive trend of which is towards a world-wide mobility of goods, ideas, and the citizens who produce them. The role of the air route in this process is no longer a matter of dispute, and it is clear that the time has come to consider certain technical questions which underlie any detailed scheme for a truly international network of airways.
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- Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1945
References
1 Dilloway , A. J.: Cartographic Solution of Great Circle Problems, Jour. Roy. Aer. Soc., Vol. 46, 1942, pp. 4–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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3 Feeder routes branching north and south from the main great circle routes may of course ’ help to cancel out this criticism.
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6 Dilloway, op. cit.
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16 Best visualised as the difference between the bearings included by a great circle which intersects the two meridians at a given latitude.
17 Although they are ignored in practice, the angular errors inherent in a particular map introduce an additional factor into corrections for true bearing.
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24 Apparently Kahn's system was first outlined in a note presented at a meeting of the Academy of Sciences, Paris, on Feb. 20th, 1928, and recorded in Publication No. 8. See also Kahn, L.: Sur Une Extension de la Projection de Mercator: Les Nouvelles Cartes Aériennes. Académie de Marine, Communications et Memoires, Tome 8, 1929.Google Scholar
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32 An international series on the scale of 1: 2,000,000 should be well suited to the new range of world flying. It is at these scales that the “grid” method is seen to best advantage.