Crime Cases Still Using Cassettes
Technology12 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by potski205. 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.If you're standing at the water's edge, the horizon is about 3 miles away. If you click here that will link you to a web-page which has a handy computer version that helps you work it out. All you do is put the height of your eye relative to the water's edge into the slot and click on 'Compute'. So, if you're eyes are 5 ft 6 inches above the ground - ie 5.5 ft - put that into the slot. If you are standing on a 100 ft cliff, put 105.5 in.
Or, using matt_london�s formula, 1.23 times square root of the height of your eye above sea level to give the answer in statute (ordinary) miles.
This can be determined in a number of ways but perhaps the easiest is by using Pythagoras theorem of right-angled triangles. Using this, the distance to the horizon is:
SQRT (h+2rh)
Using feet throughout (for a six foot eye height) the calculation becomes:
SQRT (6+(2*21120000*6) = 15920 feet.
Divide this by 5,280 (feet in a mile) and you get 3.01 miles
matt_london�s formula is a boiled down version of this one.
A couple of things to beware of:
The principle assumes that the earth is a perfect sphere (which it is not). The calculation is the distance in a straight line from the observer's eye to the horizon and not the distance via the (curved) surface (which would be longer). Although in practice for a sphere the size of the earth this makes no measureable difference.
Sorry, xrayspecs, but your answer is wrong. (Perhaps your specs are enabling you to see further than us mere mortals!).
Using the formula I suggested and that provided by mattlondon (which gave the answer in nautical miles) the answer coincides quite nicely with that provided by quizmonster (and backed up by the info contained in the link kindly provided). That is, about 3 miles for a six-foot eye-level.
You have to be almost 100 feet above sea-level before you can see 12 miles.
Standing on the prom at Backpool on a nice day (possibly 25ft over sea level) you can see the Isle of Man to the north west and Angelsea to the south west. The bits you see are obviously above sea level but are a lot more than 3 miles away. You can see these places because (a) your eye level is higher than sea level, and (b) the stuff you see is also above sea level, but not far enough away to be totally obscured by the curved sea in between.
If you were at sea level and saw a ship coming towards you, as it approached your horizon you would see the mast and funnels first, then the superstrucure, followed by the bow-wave when it got to about three miles from you. If you were in the crow's nest on lookout duty you would see the ship at a much greater distance than your sea level colleagues on deck, so be able to give early warning of the approaching vessel (or iceberg or landfall &ct.)