Kappa calculus

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Template:No footnotes In geodesy and geophysics, theoretical gravity is a means to compare the true gravity on the Earth's surface with a physically smoothed model. The most common model of a smoothed Earth is the Earth ellipsoid.

Despite the fact that the exact density layers in the Earth's interior are still unknown, the theoretical gravity g of its level surface can be computed quite easily by using the International Gravity Formula. This refers to a mean Earth ellipsoid, the parameters of which are set by international convention. It shows the gravity at a smoothed Earth's surface as a function of geographic latitude φ; the actual formula is

gϕ=(9.780327+0.0516323sin2(ϕ)+0.0002269sin4(ϕ))ms2

The term 0.0516323 is called gravity flattening (abbreviated β). As a physically defined form parameter it corresponds to the geometrical flattening f of the earth ellipsoid.

Up to the 1960s, the formula either of the Hayford ellipsoid (1924) or of the famous German geodesist Helmert (1906) was used. Hayford has an axis difference Template:Clarify to modern values of Template:Val, Helmert only Template:Val. The Helmert formula is

gϕ=(9.80619990.0259296cos(2ϕ)+0.0000567cos2(2ϕ))ms2

A slightly different formula for g as a function of latitude is the WGS (World Geodetic System) 1984 Ellipsoidal Gravity Formula:

gϕ=(9.78032677141+0.00193185138639sin2ϕ10.00669437999013sin2ϕ)ms2

The difference between the WGS-84 formula and Helmert's equation is less than 0.68 ppm or Template:Val.

See also

Literature


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