England-2011-lab1-green

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Revision as of 19:38, 5 February 2011 by Sesmith08 (talk | contribs) (Data Collection)
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Lab Write-up for Group Green

Introduction

Description of task and approach

Despite being a completely arbitrary line, the prime meridian holds a great deal of significance for human navigation. During our visit to Greenwich, we used the prime meridian as a reference point for our assigned location. We estimated the latitude, longitude and elevation of the given spot using a GPS, a compass and human estimation. We used footsteps to determine our distance from the Royal Observatory as well as labels on a nearby lamppost.


Description of the spot

For this lab, we were directed to find the corner/intersection of May's Buildings Mews and May's Court. Quickly, we recognized (both through googlemaps and observations of the human eye) that our location was approximately on the same latitude as the Royal Observatory. Our estimate was that we were located 25 m South of the Royal Observatory’s latitude. We first took a description of what was directly North of our location. Standing on May’s Buildings Mews (a brown loose gravel road/driveway) we used a compass to look North and noted a black gate reading “The Grange”, on one side in stone, and “52 Mays Buildings Mews”, on the other side of the gate. Turning around 180° we now took observations of the location directly South of our location. In this direction ran May’s Court North to South. Along this short road were several residential homes identified as “Beaver’s Housing Society”. More directly South of our location was the front yard and the birdfeeder. Looking to the East we identified a lamppost with elevation and longitude markings. We estimated this lamppost to be about 25 meters east of our location, and it proved instrumental in many of our ‘Human Estimations’.

Data Collection

Measurements & Raw data(raw data in bold)

1) LATITUDE:

Method 1 [Human Estimation] royal observatory (51° 28’38.56”) – 25 m = 51.47737777766666° – (25m / 111248.24m) = 51.477153055010373°

(lengths of degree latitude at 51° = 111248.24m)

Method 2 [GPS]

51° 28.633’ = 51° + (28.633 / 60) = 51.477216666°

Method 3 [GoogleEarth] 51°28'37.82"N = 51° + (28 + ((37.82 / 60) / 60) = 51.4771722222°


2) LONGITUDE:

Method 1 [Human estimation/lightpole] – 0° 0.381’ + 21 m = 0.00635° + (21 m/70,197.65m) = 0.00664915°

(length of degree longitude at latitude 51° = 70,197.65m)

Method 2 [GPS] – 0° 0.372’ (converted into decimal form = 0.0062°)

Method 3 [GoogleEarth] – 0° 0'22.42"W (converted into decimal form = 0.00062277777°)


3) ELEVATION:

Method 1 [Human estimation/lightpole]13 m

Method 2 [GPS]14 m

Method 3 [GoogleEarth]22 m


4) DUE NORTH:

A black gate and driveway for number 52 Mays Buildings Mews (written in stone next to the gate says “The Grange”)


5) DUE SOUTH:

Mays Court…and a housing complex called Beaver’s Housing Society…more specifically the birdfeeder in the front lawn


6) SHORTEST DISTANCE FROM PRIME MERIDIAN:

Method 1 [Human Pace] – 184 paces (estimated at .5 m/pace) X 2 = 184 m

Method 2 [GoogleEarth]432.3 m

Data Analysis

Description of the spot


For this lab, we were directed to find the corner/intersection of May's Buildings Mews and May's Court. Quickly, we recognized (both through googlemaps and observations of the human eye) that our location was approximately on the same latitude as the Royal Observatory. Our estimate was that we were located 25 m South of the Royal Observatory’s latitude. We first took a description of what was directly North of our location. Standing on May’s Buildings Mews (a brown loose gravel road/driveway) we used a compass to look North and noted a black gate reading “The Grange”, on one side in stone, and “52 Mays Buildings Mews”, on the other side of the gate. Turning around 180° we now took observations of the location directly South of our location. In this direction ran May’s Court North to South. Along this short road were several residential homes identified as “Beaver’s Housing Society”. More directly South of our location was the front yard and the birdfeeder. Looking to the East we identified a lamppost with elevation and longitude markings. We estimated this lamppost to be about 25 meters east of our location, and it proved instrumental in many of our ‘Human Estimations’.


Discussions of sources of error


Despite being a completely arbitrary line, the prime meridian holds a great deal of significance for human navigation. During our visit to Greenwich, we used the prime meridian as a reference point for our assigned location. We estimated the latitude, longitude and elevation of the given spot using a GPS, a compass and human estimation. We used footsteps to determine our distance from the Royal Observatory as well as labels on a nearby lamppost.

Sources of error made during data collection can be attributed to several factors. In choosing to use Johanna's footsteps to measure distance, we realized that we had no way of ensuring that each footstep was equal to the next. Furthermore, our calculation of a halfway point between our designated spot and the Royal Observatory may have been incorrect. This may have led to a severely inaccurate measurement. It is also possible that the degree of error associated with the GPS system and the satellites that it corresponds with, an issue, which also may have affected the data points we obtained. When analyzing the results given by 'Google Earth', it was noticed that zero degrees longitude does not run exactly through the Royal Observatory. Instead, the GPS prime meridian lays one hundred meters to the east.

Results