ChatterBank2 mins ago
via anchorage
excuse my ignorance but the term "via anchorage" is this a "short cut "around the back for airline flights? ie surely it would be quicker to get from uk to australia this way?
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No best answer has yet been selected by tali122. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Anchorage certainly doesn't lie on the most direct route between the UK and Australia.
An aircraft taking off from London and heading for Alaska (by the most direct route) should fly roughly NNW. An aircraft leaving London, on the most direct track for Australia, should fly roughly NE to get to Sydney.
To check the most direct route and distance for a particular journey, you need an azimuthal-equidistant projection ('great circle') map, centred on the departure city. Here's one based on London:
http://www.geocities.com/rf-man/london.gif
Chris
An aircraft taking off from London and heading for Alaska (by the most direct route) should fly roughly NNW. An aircraft leaving London, on the most direct track for Australia, should fly roughly NE to get to Sydney.
To check the most direct route and distance for a particular journey, you need an azimuthal-equidistant projection ('great circle') map, centred on the departure city. Here's one based on London:
http://www.geocities.com/rf-man/london.gif
Chris
Bear in mind that if a flight did go that way and land in Anchorage all the passengers would have to go through US immigration (many of them having to get a visa) before it could continue. It would turn an hour's stop into two or three. Unlike Singapore, Kuala Lumpar, etc, there'd be precious little intermediate traffic to make it worth while.
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