and
Melbourne along the
geodesic (the shortest route) changes from 141° to 42°.
Azimuthal orthographic projection and
Miller cylindrical projection. There are several methods used to measure navigation bearings including: • In land navigation, a 'bearing' is ordinarily calculated in a
clockwise direction starting from a reference direction of 0° and increasing to 359.9 degrees. Measured in this way, a bearing is referred to as an
azimuth by the US Army but not by armies in other English speaking nations, which use the term bearing. If the reference direction is north (either
true north,
magnetic north, or
grid north), the bearing is termed an
absolute bearing. In a contemporary land navigation context, true, magnetic, and grid bearings are always measured in this way, with true north, magnetic north, or grid north being 0° in a 360-degree system. This method is only used for a
relative bearing. A navigator on watch does not always have a corrected compass available with which to give an accurate bearing. If available, the bearing might not be numerate. Therefore, every forty-five degrees of direction from north on the compass was divided into four 'points'. Thus, 32 points of 11.25° each makes a circle of 360°. An object at 022.5° relative would be 'two points off the starboard bow', an object at 101.25° relative would be 'one point abaft the starboard beam' and an object at 213.75° relative would be 'three points on the port quarter'. This method is only used for a
relative bearing. • An informal method of measuring a
relative bearing is by using the '
clock method'. In this method, the direction a vessel, aircraft or object is measured as if a clock face is laid over the vessel or aircraft, with the number twelve pointing forward. Something straight ahead is at 'twelve o'clock', while something directly off to the right is at 'three o'clock'. This method is only used for a relative bearing. • In land
surveying, a
bearing is the clockwise or counterclockwise angle between north or south and a direction. For example, bearings are recorded as N57°E, S51°E, S21°W, N87°W, or N15°W. In surveying, bearings can be referenced to true north, magnetic north, grid north (the Y axis of a map projection), or a previous map, which is often a historical magnetic north. • If navigating by
gyrocompass, the reference direction is
true north, in which case the terms
true bearing and
geodetic bearing are used. • In
stellar navigation, the reference direction is that of the
North Star,
Polaris. • In
satellite broadcasting, a
bearing is the combination of antenna
azimuth and
elevation required to point (aim) a
satellite dish antenna in a given direction. The bearing for
geostationary satellites is constant. The bearing for polar-orbiting satellites varies continuously. ==Arcs==