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Course (navigation)

 

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Course (navigation)



 
 
In navigation
Navigation

Navigation is the process of reading, and controlling the movement of a craft or vehicle from one place to another. It is also the term of art used for the specialized knowledge used by navigators to perform navigation tasks....
, a course is the intended path of a vehicle over the surface of the Earth. For air travel, it is the intended flight path of an airplane or the direction of a line drawn on a chart representing the intended airplane path, expressed as the angle measured from a specific reference datum clockwise from 0° through 360° to the line. The reference can be true north
True north

True north is the direction along the earth's surface towards the geographic North Pole.True north usually differs from magnetic north pole and grid north ....
 or magnetic north and called true course or magnetic course respectively.






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In navigation
Navigation

Navigation is the process of reading, and controlling the movement of a craft or vehicle from one place to another. It is also the term of art used for the specialized knowledge used by navigators to perform navigation tasks....
, a course is the intended path of a vehicle over the surface of the Earth. For air travel, it is the intended flight path of an airplane or the direction of a line drawn on a chart representing the intended airplane path, expressed as the angle measured from a specific reference datum clockwise from 0° through 360° to the line. The reference can be true north
True north

True north is the direction along the earth's surface towards the geographic North Pole.True north usually differs from magnetic north pole and grid north ....
 or magnetic north and called true course or magnetic course respectively. Course is customarily expressed in three digits, using preliminary zeros if needed.

In order to be used in a chart, this reference has to be true north
True north

True north is the direction along the earth's surface towards the geographic North Pole.True north usually differs from magnetic north pole and grid north ....
.

Determining the true course of a vessel

  • Heading
    Navigation

    Navigation is the process of reading, and controlling the movement of a craft or vehicle from one place to another. It is also the term of art used for the specialized knowledge used by navigators to perform navigation tasks....
     (2) is the direction the vessel, aircraft or vehicle is truly "pointing towards" (the heading of the ship shown in the image is 058°).


  • Any reading from a magnetic compass refers to compass north (4), which is supposed to contain a two-part compass error:
    a) The earth's magnetic field's north direction, or magnetic north (3), almost always differs from true north by magnetic variation (6), the local amount of which is given in nautical charts, and
    b) ship's own magnetic field may influence the compass by so-called magnetic deviation
    Magnetic deviation

    Magnetic deviation is the error induced in a compass by local magnetic fields, which must be allowed for, along with magnetic declination, if accurate bearings are to be calculated....
     (5).
    Deviation only depends on the ship's own magnetic field and the heading, and therefore can be checked out and given as a deviation table or, graphically, as a Napier's diagram.


  • The compass heading or compass course (7) has to be corrected first for deviation (the "nearer" error), wherefrom results the magnetic heading (8). Correcting this for variation yields true heading (2).


  • In case of a crosswind
    Crosswind

    A crosswind is any wind that is blowing perpendicular to a line of travel, or perpendicular to a direction. In aviation, a crosswind is the component of wind that is blowing across the runway making a landing more difficult than if the wind were blowing straight down the runway....
     (9), and/or tidal
    Tide

    Tides are the rising of Earth's ocean surface caused by the tidal forces of the Moon and the Sun acting on the oceans. Tides cause changes in the depth of the marine and estuary water bodies and produce oscillating currents known as tidal streams, making prediction of tides important for coastal navigation ....
     or other current (10), the heading will not meet the desired target, as the vessel will continuously drift sideways; it is necessary to point away from the intended course to counteract these effects.


Track


A track, also course over ground, is the actual path followed by a moving body, e.g. the vessel's track from A to B in the above given scheme. Some ambiguity exists in the fact that the path a navigator intends to follow, after evaluating and counteracting possible effects of wind and current, is also called track.

The track is equivalent to the heading (a bearing
Bearing (navigation)

In marine navigation, a bearing is the direction of one object in relation to another object, the other object usually being one's own vessel....
 "right ahead"), if no crosswind and cross current occur (2), or the vessel is stationary, but this would hardly ever happen in aviation
Aviation

File:Norwegian military Bell 412SP helicopters.jpgAviation refers to activities involving man-made flying devices , including the people, organizations, and regulatory bodies involved with them....
.

When wind is present, and is not a headwind
Headwind

A headwind is a wind that blows against the direction of travel of an object. A headwind reduces the object's speed and increases the time required to reach its destination....
 or tailwind
Tailwind

A tailwind is a wind that blows in the direction of travel of an object. A tailwind increases the object's speed and reduces the time required to reach its destination....
, the wind deflects the aircraft (or vessel) from its heading.

To correct for the wind, the aircraft or vessel points more or less into the wind. The amount depends on the vehicle's speed, the wind's speed, and the angle of the wind in relation to the vehicle. This so-called wind correction angle is computed in advance and is frequently checked while "enroute". In the above scheme, the track would be (9) for wind from port side.

GPX is an XML schema
XML Schema

XML Schema, published as a W3C recommendation in May 2001, is one of several XML schema. It was the first separate schema language for XML to achieve Recommendation status by the W3C....
 for storing track logs.

Aircraft heading


An aircraft's heading is the direction that the aircraft's nose is pointing.

It is referenced by using either the magnetic compass or heading indicator
Heading indicator

The heading indicator is an flight instruments used in an aircraft to inform the aviator of his heading. It is sometimes referred to by its older name, the directional gyro, or direction indicator or DI....
, two instruments that most aircraft have as standard. Using standard instrumentation, it is in reference to the local magnetic north direction. True heading is in relation to the lines of meridian (north-south lines). The units are degrees from north in a clockwise direction. East is 90, south is 180 and west is 270 degrees.

Note that, due to wind forces, the direction of movement of the aircraft, or track, is not the same as the heading. The nose of the aircraft may be pointing due west, for example, but a strong northerly wind will change its track south of west. The angle between heading and track is known as the drift angle or crab angle.

See also


  • Navigation
    Navigation

    Navigation is the process of reading, and controlling the movement of a craft or vehicle from one place to another. It is also the term of art used for the specialized knowledge used by navigators to perform navigation tasks....
  • E6B
    E6B

    The E6B Flight Computer, also known as the Jeppesen CR-1 Student Computer, Dalton Computer, Pooleys CRP-1, 1-W, 3, 6 and 6M in the UK, or simply the "whiz wheel", is a form of circular slide rule used in aviation....
  • Hodology
    Hodology

    Hodology is the study of pathways. The word derives from the Greek hodos, meaning "path". It is used in various contexts.*In neuroscience, it is the study of the interconnections of brain cells....
  • Bearing (navigation)
    Bearing (navigation)

    In marine navigation, a bearing is the direction of one object in relation to another object, the other object usually being one's own vessel....