How to calculate displacement from distance?

  • Thread starter Thread starter otomanb
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Displacement
AI Thread Summary
To calculate displacement from distance, understanding the concept of great-circle distance is essential, as it represents the shortest path between two points on a sphere's surface. For the journey from Islamabad to Sialkot, which is 300 km by distance, the actual displacement is approximately 30 km when measured directly. To compute this mathematically, one can use the coordinates of the two locations and apply the great-circle distance formulas available in resources like Wikipedia. However, without knowing the path's bearing or additional details, calculating the shortest distance accurately is not feasible. Therefore, having precise coordinates and understanding the path taken is crucial for determining displacement.
otomanb
Messages
59
Reaction score
0
2z4jmab.jpg



the distance from Islamabad to my hometown "sialkot" is 300km.
if i use helicopter what would be the displacement ?
Thank you!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
A map?

Or breaking it up into segments and estimating the displacement?
 
Checking google maps the displacement between the two is approximately 30km
 
i want to do it mathematically not using google earth.
is there any formula to find displacement from distance? suppose if i use helicopter how would i have to cover from islamabad to Sialkot?
 
156s268.jpg
 
I'm not sure what your terminology means...but a correct explanation for distance on the surface of a sphere is given here:

" The great-circle distance ...distance is the shortest distance between any two points on the surface of a sphere measured along a path on the surface of the sphere (as opposed to going through the sphere's interior). ..."

formulas are given in this text:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great-circle_distance
 
There is a way to calculate displacement from the distance between two points because in normal usage the two are the same, the distance of your path isn't what most people would term the distance between the two points. And aside from measuring the two lines in your image and comparing them you aren't going to have much luck converting from one to the other.
 
By distance do you mean chord length (a straight line between two points that goes through the sphere rather than along it's surface)? The wiki article linked to above includes the chord length formulas.
 
Naty1 said:
formulas are given in this text:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great-circle_distance
That looks like the best answer. Provided OP knows the co-ordinates of the two towns, just plug them into the round-earth formula, and he'll have their distance apart.
 
  • #10
You can't calculate the shortest distance between two points if the only information you are given is the distance of a path between them. There is simply not enough information.

The least information you'd need is the bearing followed at every point on the path.
 
Back
Top