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Talk:Earth radius

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Lklundin in topic Mean Earth Radius exact where ?

Untitled

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I believe that in the comment where A is the authalic surface area of Earth, the word authalic is not needed. As the term means equal area, the "authalic surface area" of the Earth is identical to the surface area of the Earth! Making the distinction between the two may confuse people into thinking that they do not really understand what authalic means. If anything, make it clear A_r is the authalic radius.

Question: Why is this comment

Note: Earth radius is sometimes used as a unit of distance, especially in astronomy and geology. It is usually denoted by RE.

part of the "Volumetric radius" section?

Should it be perhaps "Earth volumetric radius is sometimes used...", or does this comment refers to the general case, situation in which it should be moved somewhere in the main text?

Radius vs. Sea Level

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"The radius of Earth (or any other planet) is the distance from its center to a point on its surface at mean sea level." This doesn't seem right. Why is the mean radius of a planet exactly the sea level? The sea level of the earth is rising, does this mean the radius of the earth is increasing too? Why would the melting of the ice caps cause the land to rise? Anyone have a cite? -anon

Moreover many planets (most?) don't have a sea. Rich Farmbrough, 14:28, 28 February 2011 (UTC).Reply
Mean sea level establishes the hydrostatic equilibrium more accurately than more rigid land can. If sea level rises, then mean radius increases. I am not sure what melting ice caps have to do with the remainder of your question, but land beneath and around ice caps rise after melting due to isostatic rebound. For bodies that have no fluid surface, a fictitious one is established, typically as an atmospheric pressure. See, for example Mars#Geography. Strebe (talk) 19:14, 28 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

The Elevation of Mean Sea Level was lower in the Past when the climate was cooler, and there was more ice in all of the Glaciers, this includes Continental Glaciers, Glaciers that started on Continents, and ended in Oceans, and Glaciers that filled Mountain Valleys, and slowly moved down hill. Mean sea level was a very useful reference elevation when surveying equipment consisted of Theodolites, Chains, Wye Levels, Compass, Clocks, Transits, and similar devices to determine X, Y, and Z. Z is the vertical elevation above Mean Sea Level, set at a reference time period. Having a universally accepted reference elevation keeps things a lot simpler so that surveyors around the world can work together using the same system.

The Fact that sea level is rising is only an inconvenience if you happen to live too close to sea level, but it is not really an inconvenience for surveyors as long as every body agrees not to change the previously agreed upon reference elevation. Fortunately we now have the Global Positioning System ( GPS ), and the people who control that system take about 1700 continuously monitored reference points and so with the help of lots of big computers, they keep the reference elevation and the change in the reference such that the change sums up to zero. This is very good for Surveying as it makes one of the Three " Delta Z " = zero.

The other Two Delta X, and Delta Y are not so co-operative as Continents like to wander in various directions, and they even spin around about some axis. Fortunately, in most locations this motion is very small. The movement is around 1 mm per year in each of the two directions, Longitude, and Latitude. The actual movements only cause problems over very long periods of time, like millions of years when you are trying to find out where Dinosaurs actually lived, but the Location that was around the Equator 65 Million years ago is now over 20 degrees North of the Equator. That is Chicxulub, and The Deccan Traps were both near the Equator between 65 MYA and 66 MYA, and both are now around 20 degrees North of the Equator. The Impact location that is now at Chicxulub was Anti-podal to the Energy focal Point on the opposite side of the Globe at what is now the Deccan Traps in India. So millimeter per year movements really add up over millions of years to hundreds of Kilometers of movement. Mike Clark, Golden Colorado, 63.225.17.34 (talk) 04:05, 6 September 2016 (UTC)Reply

Apparently, I was wrong about how fast Plates Move. Look at UNAVCO Plate Motion Calculator. Denver is moving around 16.35 mm per year in the AZ 237.00 direction. Elko NV is moving about 18.14 mm per year in the AZ 225.00 direction, and Las Vegas NV is moving about 17.00 mm in the AZ 222.5 direction. Australia is booking North and a little East at around 7 cm per year. There is a whole lot of Plate Movement going on. In 2003, The GPS guys recalibrated the reference points on the Earth's surface. All are moving somewhere, and all are moving vertically as well. About 80 % of 1200 points moved between - 8 mm per year to + 16 mm per year, with the mid point at plus 4.15 mm per year. For simplicity, they chose only 157 points between -4 mm per year, and + 4 mm per year to constrain delta Z to zero.
This simplifies the reference system for surveying purposes, and calibrating satellite height, But...... I wonder what errors this simplification creates when viewed over very long time periods ? 98.245.216.62 (talk) 23:26, 18 April 2022 (UTC)Reply

Radius of curvature

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I have changed the formula for Rc near the end of this section to reverse M and N, since when traversing along a meridian (with alpha = 0, i.e. facing North) one is moving along "M" the meridianal radius and when moving (e.g at the equator) eastward (for alpha = + 90 degrees) one is moving along "N" the radius of curvature in the prime vertical. JimC (C&B) 17:57, 7 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

You just described it right——facing north-south the RoC = M, while facing east-west = N——so cos(0)M = M and sin(90°)N = N, which is how it was (your change went and inverted it!
Whoops, okay, I see the problem: Presenting it with MN as the numerator cancels and reverses the placement of M and N in the denominator. I've changed it to make it clearer. P=) ~Kaimbridge~ 15:21, 8 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

"Neridional" radius of curvature???

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The heading Neridonal appeared in a 1 April 2007 edit. Surely this should be Meridional. I don't think neridional is even a real word. Certainly it's not in any online dictionary. Also a Google search for it only gives 149 hits, and almost all of those hits are either this article or people who have copied this article verbatim (like answers.com). I'm going to edit this. If someone feels there is some really burning reason why it should be 'neridional' and wants to revert, please add a note here why such an obscure word that doesn't appear in dictionaries should be used. I'm looking at you, User:Kaimbridge, since you made that 1st April edit ... surely you wouldn't be playing an April Fool's joke on Wikipedia ;). Dr algorythm 03:19, 18 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

LOL!!! Sorry about that——I'm blind in one eye and the other eye's no bargain, with an acutely advancing cataract further complicating things. So, needless to say, a few typos may escape me! P=) ...Hmmm, how come it took someone two and a half months to catch?!? P=/ ~Kaimbridge~14:27, 18 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

ERROR?

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On this page the polar radius is derived as being larger than the equatorial radius. Please check this derivation. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 216.59.226.224 (talk) 04:48, 25 April 2007 (UTC).Reply

What do you mean, a (equatorial radius) = 6378.135 and b (polar) = 6356.75? ~Kaimbridge~10:49, 25 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Regarding the above given values a and b, I think they should be corrected and precised as follows: a=6378.137 km (according to GRS80 and GRS84) and b~= 6356.752 km (as a derived value). Gil

The shape of the Earth is called an "OBLATE SPHEROID". This means the Radius of the Earth is greater at the Equator ( 6378.137 km ) versus the Polar Radius that is smaller, (6356.752 KM). The shape is caused by the balance of forces between Gravity ( that wants to make a perfect sphere ), and Centripetal forces ( That wants to turn the Earth into a thin flat disc ). Gravity mostly wins, as the Earth is not spinning on its axis at a very fast rate. If you simply average the two numbers, the Simple radius is 6367.74445. This radius is about 3.5555 Km below the reference Radius of 6371 KM. They actually cheat a little to get this number, but it is fairly close to the correct value as they take 1 times the Polar Radius, and 2 Times the Equatorial radius, and divide by 3 ( 6356.752 + 6378.137 + 6378.137 ) / 3 = 6371.008667. This is rounded to 6371.009, or more commonly to just 6371.0 Km Radius. The actual Value at the Tilt Angle of a Perfect Sphere is 6372.4567 at a Tilt angle of 23 degrees 19 minutes, and 39.3 seconds ( 23.327 583 333 degrees of tilt). Note that the actual tilt angle of the Earth is similar to this number. The Earth's Tilt angle oscillates between about 22.5 degrees, and 24.5 degrees. It is currently close to 23.4 degrees. The slightly higher Radius is really only useful if you want to determine the actual Mass, and actual Average Density of the Earth. For 6371 KM, the density is around 5514 kg/m^3. For 6372.4567 km Radius, the Density is lower at 5510.183 736 kg/m^3. The Best radius to choose is the one that gives you a surface Area of the Earth that is closest to the actual surface area of the Earth. For R = 6372.4567, the Surface Area ( Simple sphere ) is 5.102 977 464 E 14 m^2, the Volume is then 1.083 950 098 E 21 m^3, the density is about 5510.183 736 kg/m^3, and the mass is about 5.972 764 201 E 24 kg. These are all close to generally accepted values. Mike Clark, Golden, Colorado, 63.225.17.34 (talk) 04:55, 6 September 2016 (UTC)Reply

Latitude dependent radius error?

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When using the formula *RADII WITH LOCATION DEPENDENCE* I've had a not logical result, for a 43ºS. calculation. My carefully result was no logical because it was 5417.374347 Km., not between the equatorial and polar radius, can spmebody explain this abnormal fact, I will be very happy if somebody explains me this anomaly, Tks. Carlos J.J.Vial <carlosjjv@terra.cl>Carlos J. Jiménez Vial 21:02, 3 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

Well, if its the actual radius at 43º, it should be about 6368 km (depending on the actual values of a and b); but if it involves cos(43º), 5417 is actually too big——it should be somewheres between 4633 and 4681 km (based on the arcradii extremes of 6335 and 6399 km)! What values does it give for 0 and 90°? ~Kaimbridge~17:37, 4 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

I am interested on the equation of estimating earth radius depend on latitude, could you give me information the reference of this equation (from where this equation come from?) Marksteven2 04:45, 3 December 2008

Please sign your talk-page posts with four tildes.
These may help:
-Ac44ck (talk) 07:47, 3 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

SI Units

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Why are we not using SI units here (radii in meters)? MeddlerOnTheRoof (talk) 02:21, 9 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Kilometres are SI. JIMp talk·cont 18:11, 29 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Changes to section on authalic radius

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I removed this text:

This number is derived by square rooting the average (latitudinally cosine corrected) geometric mean of the meridional and transverse equatorial, or "normal" (i.e., perpendicular), arcradii of all surface points on the spheroid

It may be that the number approximates the root of the average. I don't find evidence that this average is used to derive the exact expression. One derivation is here.

I also modified this text

the radius of a hypothetical perfect sphere which has the same, geometric mean oriented surface area as the spheroid.

The "mean oriented surface area" of a perfect sphere is zero, as each elemental vector area has an equal antipodal counterpart. The vector sum of the oriented area is zero. -Ac44ck (talk) 02:43, 1 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Approximation

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The original Meridional definition of a meter was one ten-millionth the distance from the North Pole to the Equator, the circumference of the earth is then (about) 40 million meters. Treating the earth as a perfect sphere then gives a nice, and easy to remember approximation for the average radius of the earth: (2/pi)*10^7 meters. This works out to 6366.2km, which is within 0.1% of all of the various figures for the average radius. Pulu (talk) 06:14, 12 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Reference or monograph

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A reference for radius of curvature section was recently expanded. It seems lengthy for a reference.

If the subject in this reference is to be expounded upon, I suggest moving the longer treatment to the great circle distance article, which doesn't seem to include any approximate formulae at the moment.

I found the reference written with:

A related application of M and N: if two nearby points have the difference in latitude of   and longitude of   (in radians) with mean latitude  , then the distance D between them is
 

I tweaked it because two-glyph symbols like   may be difficult for some readers to parse and   seemed to be used in different ways. So I changed it to:

A related application of M and N: if two nearby points have the difference in latitude of   and longitude of   (in radians) with   and   calculated at mean latitude  , then the distance D between them is
 

The current version contains undefined symbols, such as  . Why the new symbol is multiplied by a trigonometric identity to obtain   is lost on me. And current indications are that the results are exact. The previous version gave a formula that was an approximation. Perhaps the current formula is exact for a differential distance   But the introducing paragraph advertises that a way to calculate   is to be presented, and the now-more-elaborate treatment doesn't seem to deliver it.

I wondered whether the formula for   belonged in a reference when I tweaked it. But it is similar to the procedure prescribed by the FCC for moderate distances in 47 CFR 73.208, an allusion to which was recently omitted from the external references in this or a related article, and I didn't want to find a place for it in the article. That it is an application of the Pythagorean theorem over short distances on a curved surface seemed more easily discernable when the formula was by itself. - Ac44ck (talk) 22:54, 3 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

I'm the guilty party! P=)
Everything you said appears right (I, too, questioned whether it should be presented as a footnote reference, but no one moved it, and now you tweaked it, so I attempted to clarify it further). I added H ("hypotenuse") to isolate the angular distance.
First of all, the FCC formula (a better presentation of it is here) is the same formula——"KPDlat" is M and "KPDlon" is cos(lat)N, in binomial series expansion form, based on the Clarke 1866 spheroid (a = 6378.2064, b = 6356.5838). As for "(w)hy the new symbol is multiplied by a trigonometric identity to obtain  ", that is important because   and  , so if you can isolate and separate H, the left over   is the transverse meridional radius of curvature, T, or arcradius,  , that can be applied to orthodromic calculations (by using the orthodromic azimuth), for any distance (as for infinitesimal distances, it equals the geodetic distance), though it is technically the "elliptical great-circle distance", as it follows the geographical delineation, rather than the geodetic!
Something that needs to be corrected, though, is a distinction between spherical/geographical and geodetic azimuth ("whole" and "local"):
 
 
 
I give a more in-depth analysis here, though some of the notation has evolved since then (e.g., "O" is now "T", and the loxodromic azimuth notation has simplified).
As for adding it to the great circle distance article, I would suggest changing the section to "Approximate elliptical great-circle distance formula" (and after giving the FCC form, let  ,  , then  ) and moving it to after the "A worked example" section.
If you are really interested in geodetic formulation, in general, I would STRONGLY recommend Richard Rapp's Geometric Geodesy (both parts), now downloadable in PDF, free, from OSU, here: This is the bible of geodetic formulation! P=)  ~Kaimbridge~ (talk) 18:07, 4 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for this and for your reply at Talk:Great-circle_distance. I moved the section in the great circle distance article, as you suggested. I would hesitate to bring up "elliptical" in an article on "great-_circle_ distance". At the moment, the character string "ellip" appears only in two words near the bottom of the page.
I still don't understand the relationship between   and   in the current note in this article. As this Earth radius article recognizes the earth is not spherical, it seems that the accuracy of any constant-radius formula, such as   would decrease with range. It looks like a formula for a differential distance as opposed to one which is applicable for any distance.
Thanks for the pointer to Rapp's documents. Part 1 is 189 pages; Part 2 is 225 pages! I have only scanned them so far, but they look very interesting.
You have a much better handle on this topic than I do. I wouldn't feel comfortable copying things from the note here to the great-circle distance article. And on reflection, things that talk about the elliptical shape of the earth seem out of place there. Which makes the FCC formula out of place there, too. A short-distance approximation using the Pythagorean theorem would not be so complicated on a _sphere_.
There seems to be good stuff in the note here, but it makes for a longish note compared with its neighbors in the "Notes and references" section. I don't know how standard the term "great ellipse" is, but a section to address distances along such a curve seems to be missing. The article on Earth _Radius_ may not be the place for it. The article on geodesy doesn't seem to be so much about application. The Vincenty's formulae article seems to be the only treatment of non-spherical distance. Maybe a separate article is needed to discuss exact and approximate distances along the surface of a spheroid? One name for the new article might be "Geodetic formulae".-Ac44ck (talk) 21:03, 4 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Right,   is the formula for a differential distance, just like   is the formula for a differential meridional distance: So how do you find a distance of any length along a meridian? By finding the average value of M between the latitudes and multiply by the difference:  . Likewise, to find the elliptical great-circle (technically, due to the way it is differentiated, I think this would be the proper term, rather than "great-ellipse") distance, you would find the average value of T (or  ) along the great circle between the points and multiply by the angular distance:  . Andoyer's Approximationapproximates this. I have a more direct/simpler form of his equation, but I'm shutting down now, so I'll give it here tomorrow! P=) ~Kaimbridge~ (talk) 20:39, 5 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Will (eventually) add to Geographic distance, instead.  ~Kaimbridge~ (talk) 02:14, 7 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Contrary to what the first paragraph in the note says about showing how "D between them can be found", the current version doesn't seem to present a way to find D. Instead, it provides something that needs to be averaged via a forthcoming mechanism, which I gather will be quite more complicated than the formula which existed in the note last week. I don't think we need to make an either-or choice here. Both versions could be helpful to have in an article.
Interesting stuff, but finding distances along the surface doesn't seem on-topic in the Earth _radius_ article.
Agreed, though another possibility would be to change it from a reference for Rc, to its own subsection underneath ("Transverse meridional or arcradius",  ), or even its own section, "Radius of arc",   to highlight
 
 
and its relationship to
 
if you didn't think it would violate NOR!  ~Kaimbridge~ (talk) 02:14, 7 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
What do you think of having a separate article on "Geodetic formulae" with its own content (including the FCC formula and the growing contents of the note under discussion here) plus links to the Vincenty's formulae and great-circle distance articles?
The term "elliptical great-circle" seems awkward to me. A circle is a special kind of ellipse. The term reads something like an "elliptical special ellipse". The term "elliptical great-perimeter" comes to mind as an alternative. -Ac44ck (talk) 21:25, 5 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
The thing is, I think, where a great circle or great ellipse would be a straight arc ("----------"), the way this would slightly deviate from the whole geodetic delineation at each increment (as you are delineating it spherically, then squashing it down to an ellipse) would result in a broken arc, something like "-’¯‘-’¯‘-", thus it wouldn't be a smooth geodetic elliptic arc, but increments of spherical arc elliptically adjusted, independently (i.e., a polygonal arc?).  ~Kaimbridge~ (talk) 02:14, 7 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

First note

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The first note is not clear to me:

The center of the Earth is somewhat model dependent. Exceptions to the cited range occur near the South Pole and along the equator. Also, differences due to variation of mass density within the planet and tidal forces require data for the entire surface of the Earth and are not included here.
  • How is the "center of the earth" model dependent? Wouldn't the center of the ellipsoid be at the same location as that of a spherical model? The center of curvature varies for the ellipsoid, but the center of the ellipsoid is a unique point. The geometric "center of the earth" may not be at the center of mass. I don't see a need to distinguish between "geometric center" and "center of mass" here. The "center of gravity" for an observer on the surface may be elsewhere, but that is a different concept.
  • How are the limits "exceptions to what cited range"? Why only the South Pole and not the North Pole?
  • How is an anomaly near the South Pole related to the location of the center of the earth or the stated value of the polar radius?
  • How do tidal forces affect the location of the center of the earth? Or is this referring to deformation of the surface by tidal forces? The discussion so far in the article seems to assume that the surface is a static shape of some form (spherical, ellipsoidal) as opposed to a moving surface.
  • Two of the three wikilinks are already in the "See also" section.

Do we need to keep this footnote? -Ac44ck (talk) 20:48, 26 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

I rewrote the first paragraph. It had become incoherent. I think you still have questions, but let's start over, referring to the new first paragraph. Strebe (talk) 02:24, 27 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Every shape (solid or not) has a radius at every point. A straight line has an infinite radius at each point. I thought the phrase "a radius that is the same by all measures" was fairly elegant. The article covers both "radius to a geometric center" and "radius of curvature" (which generally varies with both latitude and azimuth). Those are different ways to measure the radius. They are the same for all points (in every direction) on a sphere.
The mention that the radius "varies from place to place" might say something about the role of topography in that variation. The radius is constant at a given latitude for the models discussed in the article.
The part about "Exceptions to this range occur near the South Pole" is confusing to me. The polar radius is one of the limits in the "6,356.750 km to 6,378.135 km" range, so it isn't an exception. The polar radius is equal for both poles, so I don't see a need to single out the South pole. Likewise, the equator is one of the limits, not an exception.
Other prior questions remain. - Ac44ck (talk) 03:28, 27 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
I am not aware of any definition of radius that applies to anything but (hyper)spheres. If you know otherwise, please cite it? I reverted your changes to the lead paragraph for several reasons. For one, the problem with definition of radius. For another, it's too chatty. For yet another, the restriction of the discussion to a geometric model of the sphere is not made until later in the paragraph; hence it makes no sense to discuss variation by "latitude" when the discussion is about the geoid at that point. It is true that the south pole disclaimer is bogus; local topography there never exceeds the equatorial radius. But the equatorial disclaimer holds; local topography exceeds the model ellipsoid radius. Still, it is poorly written as is because the notion of a model ellipsoid has not even been introduced and yet it is comparing measurements against that. I'll make another attempt. It sure was a mess before! I think we're making progress. Strebe (talk) 09:50, 27 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
An ellipsoid may be described using spherical coordinates, where every point on the surface is defined by a radius from a geometric center: http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Ellipsoid.html .
I shortened sentences; I thought that would make it less convoluted than it was. A complaint seems to be that things were done out of order: restricting discussion to a sphere too early and not introducing an ellipsoidal model early enough. But the first sentence was and is about a sphere. The second sentence did and does talk about various values for the radius. Mentioning variation with latitude doesn't seem a grievous offense.
I get the immediate impression from the talk about spheres in the first sentence that the geoid is not the main topic to be discussed. "The notion of a model ellipsoid" is at least implied by giving two orthogonal values for the radius. What shape should the reader have in mind if not a sphere or ellipsoid? I wouldn't expect an average reader to have the complex shape of the geoid in mind while scanning the lead paragraph.
"The distance from mean sea level at each point on the surface" seems to exclude topography, so an "equatorial disclaimer" wouldn't seem to be needed. The equatorial radius is stated to a resolution of less than one meter. Is that actually a "sea level" radius or some average of land and sea levels?
To say that the earth "approximates a sphere" sounds like it is an action taken by the earth, but humans are making the approximation. I would change the current text to say "the earth's radius deviates from that of a perfect sphere by only a third of a percent" because only one property of the earth is being compared with a sphere. "Earth" is not capitalized when it follows "the": http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/grammarlogs1/grammarlogs212.htm .
How does reversion of a "too chatty" edit that was "poorly written" qualify as "progress" as opposed to reversion? -Ac44ck (talk) 12:05, 27 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
At the risk of touching off another harangue, I tried fixing the lead again.
I note that in this diff, I made two changes:
  • "A true sphere has a unique radius" to "A true sphere has a constant radius"
  • "Strictly speaking only a sphere has a true radius" to "Strictly speaking only a sphere has a radius that is the same by all measures"
And the lead was suddenly found to be "an incoherent mess."
In this diff, I made modifications to the text as left by a previous editor to:
  • Attribute action to people rather than the inanimate earth
  • Allow for other shapes being perceived as roundish
  • Change "varies from place to place" to "varies with latitude"
  • Shorten a confusing sentence
  • Add one sentence
  • Insert a paragraph break
And its previous editor declared it "chatty" and "poorly written".
The insistence that only a sphere may have a radius is contrary to the action of providing two values for the radius in the lead.
I think that "varies from place to place" is too general. The text specifically talks about "The distance from mean sea level at each point". I haven't investigated whether the stated radii are actually sea level values, but that's what it says. And those distances don't vary randomly from place to place. They vary comprehensibly with latitude.
To say that "the earth deviates" is also too general. It is the radius which deviates from the value for a sphere.
I think there are too many "to"s strung together in the second sentence for ease in reading, but I'm not going to change that at the moment.
The footnote still says "The center of the earth is somewhat model dependent." How so? For which two models is the center at a different location?
The capitalization of "Earth" seems contrary to usual practice, but it occurs throughout the article. -Ac44ck (talk) 19:35, 27 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
This document http://earth-info.nga.mil/GandG/publications/tr8350.2/tr8350.2-a/Chapter%203.pdf suggests that the equatorial radius of the WGS 84 Ellipsoid is within 2 meters of a measured "mean sea level" at the equator. -Ac44ck (talk) 22:02, 27 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
First of all, my comments about an incoherent mess do not apply to your recent edits; they apply to the state of the lead paragraph as it has been for a long time, so I will not respond to that portion of your essay.

Your citation for definition of "radius" is not satisfying. You cited a usage, not a definition. Meanwhile, that quote is simply a loose usage by that same site's dictionary of math terms: "Radius: The distance from the center of a circle to its perimeter, or from the center of a sphere to its surface. The radius is equal to half the diameter." (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Radius.html) In particular, radius does NOT mean "the distance from a point on a solid's surface to its center". At least, I can find no such citation, and since all the citations I can find say otherwise, your inferred definition seems to be on unsupportable ground. In general "center" is not even defined for a (hyper)solid, and while it may be for an ellipsoid and a few other solids by virtue of symmetry, it is not well-defined even for the geoid. Therefore I strongly resist the verbiage of "constant radius"; it is self-redundant and implies more generality than accepted usage allows for.

Your lexicography of "the Earth" is some random site's statement of usage, which in fact says that any combination is in use. Meanwhile, Wikipedia's convention is found here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style
Hence, "the Earth".

I will work more on the lead sentence to make plain when the real earth is being discussed, versus the geoid, versus a geometric model. Meanwhile I have reverted your edits for the reasons given. Strebe (talk) 01:16, 28 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

Oh, and with regard to the Earth "approximating" a sphere: I disagree with your analysis. At the very least it seems uselessly pedantic, since no one would be confused by the usage as it stands, but I would also argue that your point is semantically incorrect. If you were to remove tidal effects, the Earth would approximate a sphere somewhat better, and if you were to remove centripetal forces, it would approximate a sphere very closely indeed. "Approximation" is reciprocal. If a Taylor polynomial approximates a sine wave, then the sine wave approximates the Taylor polynomial. There is nothing incorrect in stating the Earth approximates a sphere. Therefore in the interest of a pithy text and elimination of excessive qualifiers, which themselves open up ambiguities, a responsible editorial policy opts for terseness. Strebe (talk) 01:32, 28 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for your opening remark. Yet it seems that you are intent on reverting what I write. I tried to modify your text after you discarded mine; and you discarded that.
I see that the lead is now much longer than the "chatty" version I had tweaked. I think the current lead is overblown; it is practically a mini-article, if not longer than some articles in WP. But I'm done trying to fix it for now.
I find the insistence on such a narrow definition for the word "radius" to be flabbergasting. The radius article says:
More generally ... the radius of something ... refers to the distance from its center or axis of symmetry to its outermost points.
I am going to agree to disagree. I won't say that we will agree to disagree because that may be assuming too much. I don't understand the reason for what I perceive as hostility being directed my way. Did I do something that ticked you off? If so, what? -Ac44ck (talk) 04:56, 28 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Ac44ck, I apologize if you are feeling persecuted. Let me be plain: It is your edits and comments that led me to take a good look at that lead paragraph and see what a complete mess it really was. Hence I am grateful. If you will notice, it is not your edits in particular that I edited away. It's everyone's, including my earlier ones. The problems were too pervasive not to just start over.

"Chatty" does not mean "long"; it means "long-winded": too many words to convey the meaning. A 2,000 page book can be terse; a single sentence can be chatty. Passive voice, parenthetical asides, and strings of words like "may be approximated by a sphere" are chatty.

With respect to the definition of "radius", I do not dispute that the term is used more generically, particularly in various specialties — that is this article's raison d'être! But dictionaries — even mathematical dictionaries — define the term in a standard way, and other usages are field-specific. A typical reader will be equipped neither with the knowledge nor the references to understand it in any other way. In particular, since we are trying to explain what we mean by this specialized meaning of "radius", it is circular to depend upon that specialized meaning to explain it.

The article is about Earth radius, but the lead paragraph's explanation of what was meant by "Earth radius" was incoherent. It's what led to all your questions in the first place. Random facts were inserted between what should have been a continuous narrative, leading to confusion about what was being said and why. The narrative was missing information needed to understand what it was trying to say. Statements were made before dependent information was introduced. A lead paragraph(s) fails if it cannot explain cogently what the article is about. There was nothing cogent about the presentation, and therefore it was useless to make incremental edits, as we were both doing.

The lead paragraph should now contains enough information and sources to understand what all uses of "Earth radius" mean, and the rationale for using the term, without duplicating information in the article body and without redundancy or irrelevant material. If that is not so, then it needs more work. Strebe (talk) 06:25, 28 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thanks, Strebe, for the reply above.
So what was lacking was a definition. This gets it done in short order:
  • For the purposes of this article, the term "radius" means the distance from the "center" of the Earth to an idealized point representing the "surface" of the Earth.
  • This article represents the "surface" of the Earth either as an ellipsoid or a sphere. For other shapes, please refer to the Figure of the Earth article.
  • The "center" of the earth is taken to be the geometric center of that ellipsoid or a sphere.
  • Local topography is ignored; distances from the center of the Earth to particular points on the actual surface of the Earth are not address in this article.
  • This article also discusses radii of curvature, which may have other centers.
If an average reader arrives at an article entitled "Earth Radius", I don't know what they might be looking for other than a "center-to-surface" distance. By providing definitions of what are meant in the article by "center", "surface" and "radius", the reader now has enough information to decide whether they are in the right place.
I think the current lead is too detailed and covers too much ground. For me, a function of a lead is to decide whether I want to read more of the article. I think that I am now probably more familiar with the concepts mentioned in the lead than an "average" reader might be, but my eyes start to glaze over about half way though the lead because it is telling me way more than I usually want to know to answer the question: "How big is the Earth?" If I find an article that says it is about the radius of the Earth, I expect to answer that question by finding a number and multiplying it by two.
I think that the whys and wherefores about the decisions to use an ellipsoid, sphere, or whatever, might wait until the reader actually decides that they want to delve further into the article. Maybe parts of the current lead would be of more interest the introduction. - Ac44ck (talk) 08:26, 28 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Ac44ck, you make an alluring case, and I am nearly convinced. For example, perhaps the article should lead out with the range of values useful as an "Earth radius", since some major fraction of visitors are probably only looking for that. From there it can get more involved. My biggest concern is that the lead paragraph(s) needs to mention all the usages of the term "Earth radius" so that the visitor can tell early on whether this is even the right article. I see no way to avoid a discussion of the various models in that case, since "radius of the earth" is also a concept in geoidal models. It is easy enough to then shuffle the person off to some other page, but it's also true that this article does discuss the geoid in several places, rather contrary to your assertions. What you propose is simple, though. I like it a lot.

Please note that I simplified more before I found your most recent response. Those simplifications do not alter the basic structure, though, and I can certainly see that most people's needs would be met by nothing more than a couple of numbers they can use as a value for "the" radius. Strebe (talk) 10:48, 28 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Nice job on the new lead, Strebe. It doesn't exhaust my interest before I get to the table of contents anymore, and it tells me that I am likely to find news I can use here.
It seems to retain the problem that you complained about: a (shall we say) purist may have a narrow interpretation of the word "radius". They may stumble over the first use being "natural radius" when, to them, "radius" means only one thing. The term "natural radius" may seem redundant to them. If we are concerned about a misunderstanding of the word "radius" as it is used in this article, then clearing that up might be the first order of business. Whether the earth is spherical or a cube, our topic here is "radius"; and that means ...
Or maybe the "purist" needs to read with more flexibility.
There was good stuff in the longer version of the lead. It all seems to be gone now. Including some of it elsewhere in the article may be beneficial, as other sections are pretty lean on explanation. - Ac44ck (talk) 19:13, 28 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
It's all thanks to your suggestion, Ac44ck. I am considering how to work in the material I removed from the lead; it just got too late last night! I think it should go into the Introduction in some manner; perhaps most of it as-is. Concerning "natural radius", I vacillated between "serves naturally as its radius" and "serves as its natural radius", the former being faintly more accurate by some interpretation of semantics, and the latter flowing better without any realistic confusion. I do not think it proper to simply leave out "natural" or at least some word conveying that we will be using the term "radius" with respect to the Earth even though we're not talking about a sphere. Of course I'd like others' opinions, and of course feel free to edit as you see fit. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Strebe (talkcontribs) 21:03, 28 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

Polar radius

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The current value in the article for polar radius is b = 6,356.7523 km, which would seem to more than accurate enough for an average visitor.

But I have a consistency problem: The value is attributed to "WGRS 80/84" in the "Fixed radii" section. It is attributed to WGS (E2008) in the "Mean radii" section.

In following links to here, it appears that WGS (E2008) is using the values of a and f from WGS 84.

The table here says those values make b ≈ 6,356,752.314,245 m. It uses the " ≈ " symbol, but reports the value to the nearest micron (1e-6 m)!

NOTE: Take 6,371,008.8 X 3 = 19,113,026.4 minus 6,356,752.314 245 = 12,756,274.09. Dividing by 2 gives 6,378,137.043 m. I do not think the 43 mm is all that important when compared to the 6,378,137 meter radius at the equator. 98.245.216.62 (talk) 23:24, 18 April 2022 (UTC)Reply


For comparision:

Item Size
Grain of Sand 100 to 2000 microns

So the precision of b in WGS (E2008) is adequate to make a topographic map of surface features on grains of sand.

What I have read suggests that the value for a does well to match an observable value for MSL by +/- 2 meters. Applying a flatness factor to it wouldn't seem to justify six decimal places in the result. The article also notes that the geoid heights at the poles are 1) unequal, and 2) "off" by at least 13 meters. Stating the value of b to the nearest micron seems absurd.

But I am uncomfortable with rounding "for" the visitor without telling them, though I did it myself in this edit, where I rounded to the nearest millimeter because the values for both GRS 80 and WGS 84 were the same through that precision here.

The value of b was further rounded to the nearest 0.1 meter for unstated reasons in this diff.

So I have three questions:

  1. When might one want the value of b to the nearest micron?
  2. What reference "should" we cite for the value of b?
  3. If we cite a source but round its value, do we need to tell the visitor that we rounded "for" them?

-Ac44ck (talk) 01:01, 30 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

  1. Surely the only point of that much precision would be for use in other calculations, such as recovering the flattening value or computing the eccentricity. Sub-meter precision does not say anything useful about the "actual" polar radius, of course.
  2. http://earth-info.nga.mil/GandG/publications/tr8350.2/tr8350_2.html
  3. I would think so, along with the reason.

Strebe (talk) 03:13, 30 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

WGS (E2008)

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The "Mean radii" section refers to WGS (E2008). Does it use values for a and f that differ from those in WGS-84?

I downloaded the latest PowerPoint viewer to look at the file in the reference, but it doesn't render most of the slides.

Slide 23 would seem to be the key: "Summary and Model Availability", but there is a box with a red 'x' in it where there is supposed to be an image.

This page suggests to me that they might use the same values.

http://earth-info.nga.mil/GandG/wgs84/gravitymod/egm2008/egm08_wgs84.html

It appears that the "improvements" in WGS (E2008) are in the values for GM and ω, as they are not noted as being adopted from WGS-84.

These changes don't seem to be relevant in an article on "Earth radius". WGS (E2008) may be the "latest and greatest" version, but the PPT file is mostly unintelligible unless one has the "right" way to read it. I haven't found an HTML version of it.

Why not refer to WGS-84, for which information seems to be more accessible? - Ac44ck (talk) 19:52, 30 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

This may contain the same slides in a different order:
http://www.dgfi.badw.de/typo3_mt/fileadmin/2kolloquium_muc/2008-10-08/Bosch/EGM2008.pdf
The "Summary and Model Availability" is Slide 4 in the PDF file. It doesn't give values for a and f.
Shall we use http://earth-info.nga.mil/GandG/publications/tr8350.2/tr8350_2.html for the reference in both the "Fixed radii" and "Mean radii" sections? -Ac44ck (talk) 23:08, 30 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
There is no point in using E2008 or being so specific as to note E2008. The datum is different but the ellipsoid is the same for all WGS84-based datums. We don't care where the ellipsoid is anchored. Feel free to improve accordingly. Strebe (talk) 02:31, 31 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

Not sure what this means

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  • At the geographic coordinates 0°00′S 121°50′E the geoid height rises to 63.42 m above the reference ellipsoid (WGS-84), giving a total radius of 6,378.200 km.

This is listed as a notable radius. The text doesn't say why it is notable. At first glance it looks like a random location. I'm guessing that this is the maximum height above the reference ellipsoid. If so, the word "greatest" or "maximum" should be in the sentence. Also, if this is the maximum, shouldn't the minimum be listed as well? Is the minimum in the Indian Ocean? -- SamuelWantman 07:06, 9 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

I do not understand the significance of the entry, either. Feel free to remove it. Strebe (talk) 07:35, 9 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
It makes sense to me (though I didn't add it): It is showing that the actual maximum value of a is 6378.2 km (at 121°50'E), not 6378.137, as WGS-84 defines. And, right below that, the different, actual values of b for both poles are given. Perhaps it would be clearer to rename the subsection as "Radii extremes" (and maybe move the equatorial and polar extremes above the "Maximum:" and "Minimum:" values)? ~Kaimbridge~ (talk) 14:03, 9 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
Probably best not to argue over what "maximum value of a" could mean, since presumably that's in the Andes, not the Indian Ocean. If the intent is to state that the point is the greatest distance of the geoid from the center of the earth, then it needs to be written more plainly... and preferably cited, since it's not readily calculable, the way Chimborazo is. But is it really the greatest distance of the geoid from the center of the earth? Why would that just happen to be on the equator? If the intent is to state that it is the greatest distance of the geoid from earth's center along the equator, then I start to wonder why that's notable. It's not actually any sort of contender for the semjimajor axis of the approximating ellipsoid. If it has anything at all to do with an ellipsoid then it would be something like, Defines the smallest ellipsoid that encloses the geoid as long as we require the earth's equator to lie on the plane of the ellipsoid's semimajor axis, even though the whole point of an approximating ellipsoid was to get a best fit, not a minimally-enclosing ellipsoid. Therefore defeating any significance of it. Strebe (talk) 01:41, 10 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
I added the section in this diff. My initial purpose was to provide focus for a reader who was interested only in values for 'a' and 'b'. I moved the min/max geoid radii to a different section. The values for 'a' and 'b' and min/max geoid radii seem theoretical to me, so I added min/max radii for permanent landmarks which one might be able to visit.
The article is about "Earth radius". I would keep all the various min/max values in the article. - Ac44ck (talk) 04:21, 10 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
But what IS the value given? What does it correspond to? Strebe (talk) 04:38, 10 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
It seems to be the location of maximum distance from the center of the earth to a point on the geoid.
The image in the article labeled "Geoid Height" shows the difference between geoid radius and ellipsoid radius. The 0°S 121.83°E location is within a region of the image where geoid height is a maximum. The maximum ellipsoid radius is on the equator. Maximum geoid height on top of maximum ellipsoid radius yields maximum geoid radius. Another relative maximum is shown in the North Atlantic, but the ellipsoid radius is shorter there.
The minimum in the Indian Ocean is not a minimum radius. The greatest negative difference between radii occurs in the Indian Ocean. The ellipsoid radii have minimum values at the poles. The "Geoid Height" image indicates that relatively little adjustment to the ellipsoid radius is needed at the poles. Geoid radii at the poles are unequal; both are shorter than the geoid radius in the Indian Ocean.
The text giving the location of the maximum geoid radius was added in this diff.
As noted, the wording could use tweaking after we have agreement on what it was intended to communicate.
My original name for the section in this diff was "Extreme radii" but it didn't seem to fit with listing the geoid radii for both poles. If the section contains only "extreme" radii, then only one polar geoid radius should be listed. But I wanted to keep both values, so I changed the name of the section to "Notable radii". Maybe the section needs a better name. - Ac44ck (talk) 18:01, 10 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
I went to http://www.oc.nps.edu/oc2902w/geodesy/geodexer/geoidmn.html to peruse the geoid data. The maximal value I found was +81.11m at 5°S/150°E, but the high latitude more than canceled out the rise above the ellipsoid. Walking around the entire region from 120°E to 155°E, ±5° of latitude, I find the point 0°N/133°E to have +72.81, greater than the +63.42 quoted in the article. The geodetic coordinate resolution of the map isn't very good, though, so it's hard to say with any precision where the real maximum is. Hence I looked at the underlying data, which can be found here: http://www.oc.nps.edu/oc2902w/geodesy/geodexer/geoidata22a.js.
The geodetic resolution of the data is only 1°. Meanwhile the radial "penalty" for a one degree change in latitude on the ellipsoid is -64.59m at the equator. Since the radial penalty is on the same order as the geoidal data's maximal deviations from the ellipsoid, and since the geoid changes only slowly at that scale, it's clear the maximum radius of the geoid must be very close to the equator. The smoothly varying geoid is amenable to polynomial interpolation, so a reasonable location could be inferred by finding the neighborhood along the equator with the highest cluster value. A casual look at the data suggests 140°E, with an equatorial rise of +74.21, flanked by +72.62 and +73.54 north and south. The problem with this methodology, however, is that we can go considerably west to 131°, finding a rise of +73.70 flanked by +75.03 and +70.99 north and south. There are several other candidates. With data of this resolution we cannot infer where in this region the real maximum is. The best we can do is state something like "about +74m along the equator in the region of 130°E–143°E." Strebe (talk) 22:00, 10 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
The calculator here http://sps.unavco.org/geoid/ says:
Latitude = 0° N = 0° 0' 0" N
Longitude = 133° E = 133° 0' 0" E
GPS ellipsoidal height = 0 (meters)
Geoid height = 73.762 (meters)
Unhappily, the calculator says 73.762 instead of +72.81. The discrepancy may suggest that, as when seeking a value for _the_ polar radius, there may not be _one_ geoid which is "correct". But the calculator reinforces the notion that maximum geoid radius is not at 0°S 121.83°E. With enough persistence, one might this (or a similar) calculator to find a precise location where geoid radius is maximum. - Ac44ck (talk) 04:32, 11 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
I perused a few papers dealing with accuracy of geoidal models. Accuracy seems to vary quite a bit from locale to locale and by method of measurement. It does not look like sub-meter precision means much in most places under most circumstances because the height of the geoid just isn't known that precisely. The data set here http://earth-info.nga.mil/GandG/wgs84/gravitymod/wgs84_180/wgs84_180.html, brought into MS Excel, penalized for latitude, and sorted, shows clearly that the only candidates for maxima occur as I describe above. Given uncertainties, the best that could be said is that it occurs within 0°15' of the equator between 129° and 142° east. But I haven't found a single reference that seems to care about such geoidal extrema (except in terms of deviation from the ellipsoid), and I do not believe one will be found. Therefore I retrospectively support SamuelWantman's deletion. Any further comments? Strebe (talk) 09:29, 12 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

If this is in fact notable or significant, it must have been written about somewhere, and mentioned in a third party source. If so, it should have a citation. I'm removing it for being uncited information, that might be original research. If someone can produce a cite, feel free to revert my change. -- SamuelWantman 03:57, 12 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

This is under discussion. What purpose is served by this haste? Strebe (talk) 05:26, 12 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Your first comment was that I should feel free to remove it! I read through the discussion, and nobody has produced a citation for the information, and the discussion indicates that it is original research. I don't mind waiting a few days to delete it again, but I want to make it clear that without a citation I believe it should probably be deleted. I came to this article as a reader trying to understand how the Earth's radius varies because of gravitational anomolies. As a reader I find the article very confusing because there seems to be two ways of looking at radius, one is an idealized radius that ignores the topology of the earth and the other is from actual measurements. For the benefit of readers, the difference between the two needs to be clarified using non-technical English. -- SamuelWantman 18:42, 12 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
Please see my note above. I agree the citation should be deleted. I am waiting for other participants in the discussion to weigh in. Concerning the clarity of the article, it would be good to know your thoughts on specific passages. The introduction should have made clear that there are several different models, and what "radius" means with respect to them. Any help would be appreciated. Strebe (talk) 21:00, 12 March 2009 (UTC)Reply
I don't have an application for geoidal extrema in mind today. I just moved existing text rather than throwing it away. I can imagine that the values might be of interest to some; they apparently were of interest to the editor who added them. I have no objection to their deletion. - Ac44ck (talk) 05:35, 14 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Yet another source of confusion

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The lede paragraph begins:

Because the Earth is not perfectly spherical, no single value serves as its natural radius. Instead, being nearly spherical, a range of values from 6,357 km to 6,378 km (≈3,950 – 3,963 mi) spans all proposed radii according to need,...

I cannot make sense of "spans all proposed radii according to need". Does this mean that these figures a are the range of numbers used in geologic and astrophysical computations? If so, it should say so. The numbers are clearly within the range of the actual maximum and minimus listed later in the article. How about this for the lede:

"Radius" is normally a characteristic of perfect spheres. Because of the equatorial bulge, the Earth is not perfectly spherical, so no single value serves as its natural radius. The radius is at its minimum at the floor of the Arctic Ocean at the North Pole. The average of the two poles is 6,357 km. The radius is at its maximum at the summit of Mount Chimborazo near the equator. The average radius along the equator is 6,378 km. As a result of this variation, Earth radius has come to mean the distance from some "center" of the Earth to a point on some idealized surface that models the Earth. Mathematical models are used to calculate approximate values for the variation in Earth's radius. Several different ways of modeling the Earth as a sphere all yield a convenient mean radius of 6371 km (≈3,959 mi). This article deals primarily with spherical and ellipsoidal models of the Earth. See Figure of the Earth for a more complete discussion of models.
Note: Earth radius is sometimes used as a unit of distance, especially in astronomy and geology. It is usually denoted by  .
--SamuelWantman 02:47, 19 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

SamuelWantman, thanks for the comments. We discussed the problem of the lead paragraph extensively up above in "First note". We felt it best to supply immediately the kinds of numbers people might be looking for when they visit the article, but to do it in a way that they can understand (if they choose to think about it) what the numbers mean. Your proposed edit seems clear to me, and of good quality, but, as discussed above in "First note", we'd like to get to real numbers more quickly. If you're having trouble understanding the verbiage as it is, then it probably needs work, though it seems lucid to me. Rather than rewriting in a way that pushes needed numbers further down into the paragraph, I suggest we simply mend the sentence that gives you trouble. We don't want to explain "too much" in the lead paragraph, since the main article repeats all of it anyway.

How about replacing "Instead, being nearly spherical, a range of values from 6,357 km to 6,378 km (≈3,950 – 3,963 mi) spans all proposed radii according to need, and several different ways of modeling the Earth as a sphere all yield a convenient mean radius of 6371 km (≈3,959 mi)" with "The distance from its center to hard surface ranges between 6,353 km and 6,384 km (≈3,947 – 3,968 mi). Therefore the various quoted values for its radius fall within that range. Several ways of modeling the earth as a sphere converge on 6371 km (≈3,959 mi) as a convenient mean radius."? Strebe (talk) 21:11, 19 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_radius

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This gfx http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Lowresgeoidheight.jpg is kind of wrong, that Longitudes goes from 0 --> 180° (E) and from 0 --> -180° (W)

193.162.192.70 (talk) 08:22, 29 June 2009 (UTC)Reply

-- steen bondo ---

It's a reasonable representation. Just interpret the x axis as longitudinal difference from the prime meridian. It doesn't claim to represent "absolute" longitude, and longitude isn't absolute in any case. 180°W – 180°E is just a convention, and not the only one in use. Strebe (talk) 03:53, 30 June 2009 (UTC)Reply

Meridional mean radius

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Wikipedia contains three values for the meridional mean radius in the spherical Earth article:

  • rectifying radius: 6,367.449 km
  • quadratic mean: 6,367.454 km
  • simple mean: 6,367.445 km

This Earth radius contains another, based on a root mean semicubic calculation:

  • 6367.4491 km

Presumably, the "rectifying radius" is an "exact" solution based on the elliptic integral. The approximation in this article is given to higher precision.

The approximations of the meridional mean radius probably belong here rather than in the spherical Earth article.

Whence the calculation of the root mean semicubic? I have not seen a mean calculated this way before or elsewhere. -Ac44ck (talk) 03:41, 29 August 2010 (UTC)Reply

The entire section should be removed from the Spherical Earth article and any unique material integrated with the Earth radius article. The two just duplicate each other uselessly as it is.
The rectifying radius comes from the integral, as you surmise. I do not know the source of the “semicubic” formula. It may well be original research from the contributor (User:kaimbridge [1]). It is remarkably effective, though; I see it agrees to 12 decimal places on earth-like ellipsoids. Strebe (talk) 04:42, 29 August 2010 (UTC)Reply
I wonder whether the mean radii formulae belong in the spherical Earth article instead. This Earth radius article is mostly about the "real" values. As various flat-Earth approximations are compiled in an article separate from great circle distance, the various radii for "equivalent" spherical Earths might belong in the spherical Earth article.
In looking further for the "semicubic" formula, it was found under the "Muir-1883" heading in the circumference article.- Ac44ck (talk) 15:09, 29 August 2010 (UTC)Reply
The lede states, “…Several different ways of modeling the Earth as a sphere all yield…”, and “This article deals primarily with spherical and ellipsoidal models of the Earth.” The Introduction states, “It is also common to refer to any mean radius of a spherical model as "the radius of the earth".” There is supporting material throughout. It does seem as if mean radii is very much the purview of this article. Spherical Earth, on the other hand, is much more about the conception of Earth as a sphere. Certain historical values proposed for radii belong there (Eratosthenes &c.), but otherwise this article seems more apt. Does it not? Strebe (talk) 19:28, 29 August 2010 (UTC)Reply
OK. I moved the unique material from the spherical earth article to here. -Ac44ck (talk) 01:53, 30 August 2010 (UTC)Reply

The second sentence ("all proposed radii...")

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The second sentence of the article needs an easy improvement:

"Because the Earth is not perfectly spherical, no single value serves as its natural radius. Instead, being nearly spherical, a range of values from 6,357 km to 6,378 km (≈3,950 – 3,963 mi) spans all proposed radii according to need..."

As everyone knows, the earth spheroid's radius of curvature varies between 6335 and 6400 km-- so apparently the author intends "all proposed radii" to not include radius of curvature. Which it does, unless the exclusion is made plain. Tim Zukas (talk) 18:29, 30 August 2010 (UTC)Reply

Good point. Strebe (talk) 19:18, 30 August 2010 (UTC)Reply
Much better now-- but might as well say "to points on the sea-level surface..." Dunno offhand how far from the center of the earth to the top of the highest equatorial mountain. Tim Zukas (talk) 19:51, 30 August 2010 (UTC)Reply
It does not (or need not) refer to mean sea level specifically. The article lists actual minimum and maximum, so I have revised the lede accordingly. Strebe (talk) 20:28, 30 August 2010 (UTC)Reply

Date of Moritz

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Not sure if the two Moritz refs are the same or different, but the one I'm citing seems to be dated 2000 even though 1980 appears in the title. It's here: http://www.springerlink.com/content/0bgccvjj5bedgdfu/about/ and on the "about" page it gives a year 2000 date. Also it's cited as year 2000 in Method of calculating tsunami travel times in the Andaman Sea region by Monte Kietpawpan et al. Coppertwig (talk) 23:24, 11 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

According to this page, Volume 74, Number 1 of the Journal of Geodesy was published in March 2000, so I think you're right. Also, as corroborating evidence, I was able to export a BibTex-formatted citation, which also includes a date of 2000. Jakew (talk) 21:52, 12 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

For just an average guy, this article is sheer CRAP

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I don't want a mathematical treatise on how to measure the radius of the earth. This is an encyclopedia, I expect to see a number. The radius of the earth from the centre to the equator is X. The radius of the earth from the centre to the poles is Y. Why can't some of you freakin rocket scientists do something straight forward and simple to answer the average person's question for a change? And no it doesn't have to be this way. And yes, you can provide a simple bloody answer. Everything isn't a shade of flippin grey. This is the problem with Wikipedia, you egg heads make it worthless to look for information. This is not a math course. It is an encyclopedia. Please provide information that is understandable. For God's sake. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.119.254.110 (talk) 08:12, 25 December 2011 (UTC)Reply

Fix it if is broken. Or whine. Your choice. I might as well whine about people who think the world should be arranged to suit their own personal, simplistic ways of thinking and, instead of helping, throw abusive tantrums when they don’t get exactly what the want… for free, even. And, Happy Holidays. Strebe (talk) 21:26, 25 December 2011 (UTC)Reply
Agreed, however seeing as there as a variety of reasons and ways to measure this, any value listed should be qualified. Perhaps the R1 value should be listed because it's the mean radius? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Bbbg123 (talkcontribs) 18:38, 4 April 2019 (UTC)Reply

Ellipsoidal quadratic mean radius

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This radius definition was added in these edits. “Ellipsoidal quadratic mean radius” doesn’t exist in the literature. It appears to be original research which has a lot of references on the Web, but they all go back to a single, unpublished source who appears to be promoting it. I will delete this edit in a week if there is no published source forthcoming. Strebe (talk) 06:28, 2 January 2012 (UTC)Reply

Isnt that just some fancy name for a three dimentional quadratic mean? Wouldnt "triaxal quadratic mean" be the proper term? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 173.9.95.205 (talk) 18:22, 20 July 2012 (UTC)Reply

Standard gravitational radius

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Newton's law of universal gravitation#Gravitational field

With a few simplifications:
 

Gravitational constant

 

Mass of Earth

M = 5.9722 × 1024 kg

Earth's gravity

Standard gravity is, by definition, 9.80665 m/s2

Putting it all together:

9.80665 = (6.67384e-11 * 5.9722e24) / r^2
r = sqrt((6.67384e-11 * 5.9722e24) / 9.80665) = 6,375,213.43562 meters

Standard gravitational radius = 6,375.213 km -Ac44ck (talk) 03:22, 3 July 2012 (UTC)Reply

Earth radius at N32.704220, W90.000000?

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The location in radians spherical coordinates: (1,-π/2,1) = (1, 3τ/4,1). The first one is radius of Earth, the -π/2 or 3τ/4 is 90 degrees west, and the last 1 is the angle from N. Pole or (π/2-1)rad north = (τ/4 -1) rad north which is 32.7042204869 degrees N.

I know this location by Google maps is north of Canton, MS, USA just a few hundred feet from US 51. But, problem is the radius. I put one in for the radius as for a place holder, but I would like to know is the exact value of the Earth's radius at N32.7042204869, W90.0000000000 taking into account all of the different elevations (like changes caused by the moon and sun), deformations (like geoid height), and drifts (like continental drift). I am thinking of having something like the annual South Pole remarking ceremony marking this location. How do I find all of this together in a simple way?

I am also thinking about the fact that the length of the arc with an ellipse is different from an arc with a circle. How does this affect radians?

John W. Nicholson (talk) 12:55, 19 February 2013 (UTC)Reply

This is not a trivial problem to solve. Note that the Talk page is for discussing improvements to the article. You should find a geodesy discussion board for this sort of question. Thanks. Strebe (talk) 00:44, 20 February 2013 (UTC)Reply
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Spherical

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See Talk:Figure_of_the_Earth#Spherical. --Jack Upland (talk) 12:54, 3 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

Let's centralize the discussion there. fgnievinski (talk) 15:56, 3 March 2016 (UTC)Reply


\\ — Preceding unsigned comment added by NavigationGuy (talkcontribs) 22:43, 18 November 2018 (UTC)Reply

Edited Osculating Sphere section (really, paragraph) on 11/18/2018. It's not possible for the OS and ellipsoid to have the same centers, if they have the same normals to their surfaces (which they do). NavigationGuy (talk) 23:50, 18 November 2018 (UTC)Reply

Definitional value (or approximation)

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There was a note (above) on an approximation for the radius of the Earth. It is perhaps better counted as a definitional value based on the definition of units, both SI kilometers and the still widely-used nautical miles. The radius of the Earth (in the sense of the simple mean (a+b)/2) is very nearly given by 20000/pi kilometers or 10800/pi nautical miles. Do the division, and you get approximately 6366 km or 3438 nautical miles. These values match the simple mean radius to 99.98%. In both cases, the numerator is the number of base units from pole to pole, which for both kilometers and nautical miles were originally defined to be an integral number from equator to pole. There are 10,000 km from pole to equator or 20,000 from pole to pole, and there are 90·60=5400 nautical miles from pole to equator or 10800 from pole to pole. Meanwhile pi here is just the angle from pole to pole expressed in radians. Another way to put it: the radius of the Earth in nautical miles is numerically equal to the number of minutes of angle in one radian: approximately 3438. 174.199.34.212 (talk) 16:39, 4 November 2016 (UTC)Reply

IMO this value is important enough to be listed in the table: When using nmi, the math is simple using nautical miles: R_E = (360deg * 60nmi/deg)/(2*pi) = 3437.7467708nmi = 6366.7070195 km. This is the spherical earth equatorial radius. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Bbbg123 (talkcontribs) 18:42, 4 April 2019 (UTC)Reply
This edit did not read coherently for several reasons. I have tried to improve it, but the original source's intent is not clear to me. Please provide the original text so that it can be rendered coherently. Or, perhaps we should choose a different account. Strebe (talk) 21:20, 4 April 2019 (UTC)Reply
In the end, I deleted it. Earth's radius (circumference, really) factors into the definition of "nautical mile", not the other way around. Therefore, nautical mile is not a definition for earth radius and does not belong listed among them. Strebe (talk) 19:47, 5 April 2019 (UTC)Reply

Average height, including land

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@Mindbuilder: Concerning this edit:

“The ellipsoid is sized to approximate global sea level (actually, more precisely, the geoid)[13] and therefore these values for average radius would be a little larger if the height of the land were included. However the average global height of the land is only about 835m[14], and the land is only about 29% of the surface of the earth, so the average radius would increase by less than 1km, and the average radius would be the same if rounded to the nearest km.

Thank you for the well-intentioned edit. It could be interesting to some, but it demonstrates the hazards of WP:OR and WP:SYNTH. The conclusion is false because the average radius might flip up or down one digit regardless of how small the average land height is when the unrounded value without land height is close to an integer.

Isn’t it sufficient to simply note that the average values do not include land height? As it stands, this edit isn’t really acceptable, and I don’t see any way to make it acceptable without replacing the multiple sources that have been synthesized into an erroneous conclusion with a single source that states the correct conclusion. Strebe (talk) 00:23, 14 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Ok, I had thought I saw the average radiuses were all slightly above 6371, and that therefore after adding .835*.29 they would not round up, but looking closer I see that the rectifying radius is a few km less and it looks like it would round up. So I'll remove the last part of the sentence. Mindbuilder (talk) 02:39, 14 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
@Mindbuilder:This edit really has to go. It is simply incorrect. Global mean sea level includes effects of topography. The model ellipsoid does not match sea level out in some isolated part of the Pacific, as your edit would imply if taken to its logical conclusion. In distant reaches of the ocean, a model global ellipsoid floats above sea level due to the effects of distant terrain. Notice the section discussing the geoid: It states that the geoid's variation from the reference ellipsoid deviates less than 360m. Where does that 360m come from? Not shockingly, it's related to the average height of earth's surface, both land and water. Again, this edit illustrates the hazards of WP:OR and WP:SYNTH. In order to make the statement that it makes, its it not the facts that go into the statement that need to be documented, but, rather, the conclusion itself. Thanks. Strebe (talk) 17:05, 15 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
@Strebe:You're right that the geoid varies with the land and so it includes some effects of topography. But the geoid doesn't go up under the land nearly as much as the surface of the land goes up above the geoid. The geoid is described as the height water would be if there were tunnels extending under the land at sea level. The gravity of the land above the geoid pulls it up slightly, but only a tiny fraction of the altitude of the land above. Remember, the elevation of the land is measured relative to the geoid. Cartographers use liquid levels to approximate how high the geoid is as they go inland to measure the height of a mountain (or in modern times they use GPS readings adjusted for the local geoid height). Since all land elevation is above the geoid (above those hypothetical tunnels under the land) and since the ellipsoid is fit to the geoid, the ellipsoid on average does not incorporate the measured land height hardly at all.
Imagine a spherical non-spinning planet with a calm, tide-free, ocean all over its surface. It would have a perfectly spherical ellipsoid matching the geoid and sea-level perfectly. Now imagine six small islands 100m tall and 100m across spread evenly around the planet. I'm saying six just to keep it symetrical. Now imagine you dig a tunnel through the islands at sea level so you can observe the rise of the geoid under the islands. I think you know the sea level in the tunnels under the islands would barely rise at all. Certainly not 100m like the land surface of the island. Now that the geoid of this hypothetical planet is no longer a perfect sphere, you would have to fit a new ellipsoid. But an ellipsoid fit to that tiny geoid bump would not be raised nearly as much as an ellipsoid raised to match average surface of the ocean and island surface.
Also note that the geoid differs from the ellipsoid by up to 110m (thats about 360feet) not 360m. And that is the maximum excursion. It's mostly much closer to the ellipsoid than that.
But of course I don't expect you to take my word for all this. Luckily I've found the perfect reference for the radius of the earth. This article makes a much more accurate and credible calculation of the Earth's radius and land height than any other I've seen yet. See:
http://frederic.chambat.free.fr/geophy/inertie_pepi01/article.pdf
"The mean Earth radius is usually considered to be equal to 6 371 001 m. This value corresponds to the radius of the sphere having the same volume as the reference ellipsoid. As noticed, e.g. by Fan (1998), this ellipsoid is defined in order to best fit the geoid, and does not take the continental lands outside the geoid into account."
This article concludes that the radius of the earth,s surface is 6,371,230 ± 10 m
It is clear from the article that the values for average land height of 840m or 875m are quite obsolete and no longer credible. The current credible value is about 800m, like from the NOAA website which gave 797m. https://ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/global/etopo1_surface_histogram.html
Of course there are other ways to calculate the radius, and we should preserve them in this article. Mindbuilder (talk) 23:30, 17 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
@Mindbuilder:The Chambat/Valette paper looks good. That is what should be cited as an alternative mean radius, one that considers average elevation. The calculations are not necessary. Strebe (talk) 00:52, 18 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The very first part of the very first sentence of this article starts out "Earth radius is the distance from Earth's center to its surface..." That is what this article is primarily about - the distance from the center of the earth to the surface, not sea level. Yet you have moved any mention of the fact that almost all measures of the earth radius are calculated to sea level, almost to the very end of the article! Some people want to know the radius to sea level for sure, I'm one of them. So that is appropriate for this article. But radiuses to sea level should not be considered the primary focus. And the problem is that it is not at all obvious that when you read about the earth radius to the surface that you are very likely not getting the value you are looking for. So people need a warning of that right out front so they can understand the entire rest of the article for what it means. The lede starts out with a nice round number for the radius, but then goes on to talk about a range of numbers for various reasons. The fact that the radius to the surface differs from the radius to sea level is at least as important as the other details in the lede. We give the radius rounded to the km right in the first sentence. That's fine. But then we start bringing in the subtleties and variations. There's no reason to exclude a value with a couple of extra significant digits. A historical anecdote about how the radius was first calculated and the accuracy of that, deserves to be in the lede more than a value to the full accuracy available, for the actual radius that the article is really about? At the very least, the surface radius value and explanation need to be very near the top of the article, if not in the lede, so that people will have fair warning. Mindbuilder (talk) 23:50, 19 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
@Mindbuilder: I don’t understand your objection.
  • The article states, Several different ways of modeling the Earth as a sphere each yield a mean radius of 6,371 km (3,959 mi). This statement encompasses the average surface "radius" value.
  • The article states, While "radius" normally is a characteristic of perfect spheres, the term as used in this article more generally means the distance from some "center" of Earth to a point on the surface or on an idealized surface that models Earth. It can also mean some kind of average of such distances… This statement encompasses the average surface radius.
  • You wrote: The fact that the radius to the surface differs from the radius to sea level is at least as important as the other details in the lede. By what reasoning? It is the same value as mean sea level, to the same precision given for any other value. Tacking on more digits in order to emphasize the difference violates the premise of the lede.
  • Average surface radius is explained in the section where it naturally belongs: Global average radii.
  • You state, But radiuses to sea level should not be considered the primary focus. No, actually, radii based on sea level must be the primary focus. Considerations of the geoid overwhelmingly dominate the literature. It is not our place to contradict that.
    • Mention of average surface radius in any context is rare;
    • The literature consists of only few isolated efforts to determine average surface radius but thousands of efforts to determine the geoid and reference ellipsoids;
    • The best calculated value is less accurate than determinations of the geoid;
    • The average surface height is not a physical value. You cannot measure it. It is nothing but a factoid. However, you can measure the geoid at any point. If you want to know your elevation from the average surface radius, you have to use measurable quantities—the geoid—first.
    • The only practical reasons anyone has for computing any average radius to high precision is to simplify earth’s shape so that calculations incorporating real, physical quantities such as density can be performed accurately without the complexities of the geoid. An average surface radius does not contribute to any calculation of a real quantity.
  • In all, changing the article to emphasize this average surface radius would violate WP:PROPORTION. It is practically not even WP:NOTABLE, given the lack of secondary sources. Strebe (talk) 05:49, 20 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Are you seriously claiming that the actual radius of the earth is barely notable in an article titled "Earth Radius"? You are probably right that sea level radius is actually used more and is maybe more important and desired more than total radius including land. But actual average "Earth radius" and sea level radius are two different things. Sea level radius is not actually Earth radius. Sea level radius could get its own article if it is more important than Earth radius. That would make more sense than putting the actual value of what's referred to in the title of the article all the way at the bottom of the article. But no, even though they could be put in separate articles, I don't think they should be. And sea level radius can dominate, I'm fine with that. But the actual value for what the title of the article is, should be in the lede, or at least get a short mention near the top of the article. Especially because so few people realize the values for radius usually given aren't actually the Earth radius, but only the sea level radius.
Strebe wrote: "Tacking on more digits in order to emphasize the difference violates the premise of the lede."
I don't know what premise you are referring to. If you are referring to the wide variety of radius values that result from different calculation methods, then we can just pick one representative value from our sources and let people research more if they want more precision.
If by the premise you mean that the lede is not supposed to give too much precision, I don't see where you are getting that idea. For example look at the article on the Astronomical Unit. The value is given in the lede to 12 digits of precision. The Meter is given exactly to 9 digits. The Parsec is given to 15 digits. The radius of Venus is not given in the lede, but in the info box at the top of the article it is given to 5 digits. The lede is supposed to summarize the article and give a quick reference to what people might be looking for when they call up the article. The full precision should be put in the lede, there's no reason not to, and certainly the value that corresponds to the article title, the "Earth radius" should be there.
"Average surface radius is explained in the section where it naturally belongs: Global average radii."
The lede is supposed to be a summary of the article. Since the radius of the earth including land is the primary meaning of "Earth radius" it should be both in the body at "Global average radii" and also extracted into the lede. The lede is typically multiple paragraphs. There is room for one or two sentences that match the article title.
"...radii based on sea level must be the primary focus. Considerations of the geoid overwhelmingly dominate the literature. It is not our place to contradict that."
Ok, radii based on sea level probably should be the primary focus, even though they are not actually the "Earth radius" but only the sea level radius. But the actual Earth radius should still at least rank somewhere above the bottom of the article. And you should realize that that prevalence in the literature is probably due in large part to the inability to measure the land altitude before the satellite era. It may also be significantly due to the fact that so few people realize that the values usually given for Earth radius are not actually the Earth radius, but rather sea level radius.
"The best calculated value is less accurate than determinations of the geoid."
The geoid radius is not actually the Earth radius, so the geoid radius is not a more accurate value for the Earth radius. Besides, the inability to measure a value to better than 6 figures does not usually diminish its importance much.
"The average surface height is not a physical value. You cannot measure it. It is nothing but a factoid. However, you can measure the geoid at any point."
You can't measure the geoid height without a reference location such as the center of the earth. The center of the earth is a calculated value based on the average of the geoid surface. Like the land surface, the geoid is irregular. You can measure the land surface average, and at any point, just as well and just as "physically" as you can the corresponding values for the geoid.
"An average surface radius does not contribute to any calculation of a real quantity."
You don't think the average surface radius including land contributes to calculating a "...real, physical quantit[y] such as density..." of the Earth?
In my last edit you oddly removed mention of land. But that is important because without saying "land" explicitly, people might not realize what part of "everywhere" that the other radius values didn't include. Mindbuilder (talk) 07:01, 11 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
Are you seriously claiming that the actual radius of the earth is barely notable in an article titled "Earth Radius"? → Please read the article. Right up front, it explains there is no actual radius because Earth is not a sphere. Any radius is a contrivance, including the one you promote. Therefore your arguments in this regard fail.
Sea level radius could get its own article if it is more important than Earth radius. That would make more sense than putting the actual value of what's referred to in the title of the article all the way at the bottom of the article.Earth radius is a term of art. It does not mean what you imply it to mean here. Therefore your arguments in this regard fail.
For example look at the article on the Astronomical Unit. The value is given in the lede to 12 digits of precision. The Meter is given exactly to 9 digits. The Parsec is given to 15 digits. That is because those values exist to those precisions. Earth's radius does not; there is no such quantity. Earth is not a sphere. It has no particular radius, neither to 15 digits, nor 12, nor 9, nor even 5. Therefore your arguments in this regard fail.
Since the radius of the earth including land is the primary meaning of "Earth radius". → No. It is not. You made that up. Therefore your arguments in this regard fail.
And you should realize that that prevalence in the literature is probably due in large part to the inability to measure the land altitude before the satellite era. It may also be significantly due to the fact that so few people realize that the values usually given for Earth radius are not actually the Earth radius, but rather sea level radius.—along with the rest of your arguments: I don’t care about your sophistry. You are wrong on several accounts, and but even that does not matter: it is not our place to debate these things. It is our place to report WP:NOTABLE information in WP:PROPORTION. Strebe (talk) 09:27, 11 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
@Strebe - When I say the "actual" earth radius, I don't mean the one and only value by one particular averaging method, I mean the radius including the land, as opposed to the radius of only the sea level. The sea level radius is not the actual earth radius because it is smaller than the full earth surface by a significant margin. Sea level radius, however you calculate it, is very useful and a decent approximation for many purposes. Many people use and refer to it as if it was the actual radius. But it is just an under valued approximation, not the actual full earth radius. The earth radius including land may be a contrivance, but then all of the other values of earth radius are no less contrivances. Whether any of them are contrivances is no reason to hide from the reader that most of the contrivances don't include the land. Earth radius is not a term of art generally. Sometimes the term IS used as a term of art, but not generally. If you think it is then what do you think its definition is? Having seen many uses of it, I'm sure you won't be able to come up with "the" meaning of that term of art. For you to claim that it is a term of art suggests that you may be unclear on what a "term of art" is. "Earth radius" has a plain common meaning, or several, in addition to its special meanings, like the astronomical convention of equatorial sea level radius.
Strebe wrote: That is because those values exist to those precisions. Earth's radius does not; there is no such quantity.
But there does exist such a quantity, (which can be determined to several significant digits), as the radius of a sphere equal in volume to the earth. We can report such a quantity and/or similar ones. If there is no such quantity as earth's radius, then what is the point of the whole article? Can we give no numbers? If the point is to inform the reader of various approximations, then what's the purpose of not warning them that most of the approximations don't include the land? You didn't know it, I didn't know it, probably a lot of other people don't know it. The astronomical unit and the radius of Venus are also averages and approximations, although some definitions of astronomical unit are defined to have a certain value, others are averages of earth's nearly, but not quite, elliptical orbit. The fact that a physical value is not known exactly is no excuse not to give an approximation as accurate as it reasonably can be.
Elevation isn't only land. The sea has an elevation as well that is currently rising due to global warming. And even if it doesn't, it should be made clear to readers that land is usually excluded from the radius, not left for them to deduce from the subtleties of the definition of the word elevation.
I've cited reliable secondary sources referring to earth's radius including the land, so I don't know what in particular you are referring to in your links to NOTABLE and PROPORTION. Surely the FULL earth radius average, not just the lesser sea level radius average, is notable in an article about the earth's radius. I'm not talking about dominating the article with it. Just a couple sentences. Is it really that offensive to you to include the word "land" in the article somewhere for the sake of clarity? Mindbuilder (talk) 11:20, 11 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
When I say the "actual" earth radius, I don't mean the one and only value by one particular averaging method, I mean the radius including the land, as opposed to the radius of only the sea level. → You have completely contradicted yourself within that one sentence: Your favored radius that includes land is exactly “a one and only value by one particular averaging method”. But it does not matter what you mean; the earth has no “actual radius”. It is not a sphere.
The sea level radius is not the actual earth radius because it is smaller than the full earth surface by a significant margin. Describing a difference as a “significant margin” is no way to encourage people to take you seriously when that difference is less than one percent of the meaningful range of values used for “Earth radius”. Also, your use of “actual radius” is a solecism. The earth is not a sphere.
Many people use and refer to it as if it was the actual radius. → No they don’t; you made that up.
Earth radius is not a term of art generally. → Your comments here are stuff you’ve made up. I’m not interested.
But there does exist such a quantity, (which can be determined to several significant digits), as the radius of a sphere equal in volume to the earth. We can report such a quantity and/or similar ones. → The article already does that as volumetric radius and authalic radius. If you disagree with how those are calculated, go write some papers on it, get general consensus from the scientific community that your contributions are important, and then we can discuss changing the article. Until then, you’re wasting everyone’s time.
Elevation isn't only land. → Yes it is; you made that up. But even if you were correct, elevation always includes land by anyone’s conception, and so you’re arguing an irrelevancy.
The fact that a physical value is not known exactly is no excuse not to give an approximation as accurate as it reasonably can be. → An average is not a physical value, and, as I keep pointing out, there are many ways of computing an average in order to come to some number for this fiction of an “Earth radius”. Since it is a fiction, and since the range of reasonable values for this fiction is huge in comparison to the 230 m you fixate on, it is abundantly evidently pointless to strain over a bunch of decimal places that lead to nothing useful. Do you not grasp that your 230 m discrepancy in radius amounts to a stunningly tiny   change in volume? (—as an example you seem interested in). In any case, the article already gives the value you advocate as accurately as it has been determined, so I really don’t know why you’re going about this. Strebe (talk) 02:41, 12 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
Thank you for your recent edit. It's a good edit. I'd say that settles this issue well enough. I consider it a great compliment to your character that you are willing to allow a small compromise rather than persist stubbornly as some others might do. Mindbuilder (talk) 06:39, 12 November 2017 (UTC)Reply
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Value of radius?

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You have an error here. It says that radius is 6.371 km or 6.378.100 m. One of that must be corrected. (Mike)

If you look at Global average radii section you can see where both these values come from. IdreamofJeanie (talk) 15:58, 12 November 2018 (UTC)Reply
I think the problem is in the sidebar, where SI units definitely state the 6,378 value instead of the range that is given for the other units. Strebe (talk) 17:38, 12 November 2018 (UTC)Reply
Yep, but it's not the range. The first sentence (6.371.000 m) and the sidebar (6.378.100 m) are not in agreement with each other. (Mike)
I have to echo what Mike says - the comments that supposedly clarify it might mean that you need to leave it at 6378 km instead of 6371 km, but then the intro should be changed to say that R_+ is 6371. (markgalassi) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Markgalassi (talkcontribs) 20:46, 4 April 2021 (UTC)Reply
@Markgalassi: I’m not sure what you’re calling the “intro” or what problem you see now. The comments in this discussion were addressed long ago. Strebe (talk) 01:58, 7 April 2021 (UTC)Reply
The citation states "If equatorial vs. polar radius is not explicitly specified, it should be understood that nominal terrestrial radius refers specifically to  , following common usage", that is, Earth's equatorial radius. Thus I've stated both Earth's equatorial and polar radii and stated which must be used when alone. Which is contrary to what the lead used to state and what the article still states, that an average is preferred! I also removed the history to conform to the hatnote, to see Spherical Earth for its history. The lead still requires a major rewrite to summarize the article, a lot of effort. — Joe Kress (talk) 04:52, 16 November 2018 (UTC)Reply
@Joe Kress: I do not support these edits. Nominal terrestrial radius is a technical term from astronomy, meeting the needs of astronomers, and should not dictate how this article presents the meaning and value of earth radius, which is more a geodetic, and earth-centric, concern. That is a faulty edit at odds with the later sections describing authalic, volumetric, and other usual radii. The history edit is also not helpful. Spherical earth is more about the concept and history of the concept of the history of the earth, not specifically about its radius. The material you deleted is not easily found in that article and not consolidated there, so directing people there means they will get lost in a wall of unrelated words. I intend to revert your edits after as short period for commentary. Strebe (talk) 19:23, 21 November 2018 (UTC)Reply
Some IAU resolutions are later adopted by the IUGG, but other than that I already stated that the lead requires a major rewrite. Regarding the history edit, Wikipedia requires that the "The lead serves as an introduction to the article and a summary of its most important contents." and "Apart from basic facts, significant information should not appear in the lead if it is not covered in the remainder of the article." Thus no history belongs in the lead because it is not even mentioned in the current article. The history information should either be transferred to a History section in this article or transferred to Spherical earth, but even if the former, it does not belong in this article's lead because even then it would not be significant. — Joe Kress (talk) 21:48, 21 November 2018 (UTC)Reply
I agree the history needs to presented in the body as well, not eliminated. Eliminating is a destructive edit; leaving it in the lede is merely an editorial faux pas. Same with the comment about "major rewrite". Yes, the lede needs to be rewritten. That is a separate matter from the problematic edits. Strebe (talk) 22:26, 21 November 2018 (UTC)Reply

Move discussion in progress

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There is a move discussion in progress on Talk:Earth's circumference which affects this page. Please participate on that page and not in this talk page section. Thank you. —RMCD bot 23:03, 6 January 2019 (UTC)Reply

Again: Talk:Earth's_circumference#Requested_move_27_April_2021. fgnievinski (talk) 01:59, 28 April 2021 (UTC)Reply

Requested move 14 June 2019

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The following is a closed discussion of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a move review after discussing it on the closer's talk page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

The result of the move request was: Lots of good ideas, opinions, and data, but clearly no consensus, even after relisting. (non-admin closure) Dicklyon (talk) 06:25, 4 July 2019 (UTC)Reply



Earth radiusEarth's radius – Consistency with other articles listed here and with our own usage within this article, where Earth's radius is used 6 times in the body and Earth radius 3 times (excluding the bold usage in the first line, which has to match the title). Srnec (talk) 01:05, 14 June 2019 (UTC) --Relisting. Steel1943 (talk) 03:55, 21 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

  • Move to Radius of the Earth as less awkward than either of those and less informal than the possessive. —BarrelProof (talk) 04:52, 14 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
  • Flatly opposed. Earth radius is a term of art in astronomy and geophysics and a unit of length in both.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11] Of course the verbiage earth's radius appears all over the place as well when Earth serves as an adjective for radius, but we have articles named like this one and solar radius (not Sun's radius) because an article is supposed to be about a topic, not about a phrase.
When the article Earth's circumference was created, I objected to the possessive on the grounds that is does not match related articles. I was ignored, and now here we are trying to change existing standard stuff to match the idiosyncratic new articles? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Strebe (talk) 05:32, 14 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

References

  • I am not supporting or opposing the move request, as I am not part of the relevant WikiProject or involved in the article. However, I would like to mention that the comparison with 'solar radius' is not really valid. Solar is an adjective, so it is by definition suited to being used before a noun such as radius; however, Earth in the sense of its usage here is a noun rather than an adjective. As such, 'Earth's radius' is more natural than 'Earth radius' due to the use of the possessive apostrophe for the noun. But as I said, I am not here to support or oppose the nomination. I am just making a point. ChocolateTrain (talk) 04:53, 22 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
@ChocolateTrain: The point is that (a) Solar radius is not Sun's radius; and (b) Solar radius is a unit of measurement and a term of art, as are the others listed. But thanks for parachuting in and “making a point”. Strebe (talk) 18:22, 22 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
Also take note of the analogous articles solar mass, Jupiter mass, Earth mass… not a possessive in sight. Strebe (talk) 05:34, 14 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
Which suggests improvement—but I also do not quite agree with your characterization of “about the quantity/measurement itself”, given that the other referenced articles address similar concerns. They are just not as detailed, for obvious reasons. Strebe (talk) 18:55, 18 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
  • Oppose per well reasoned opposition discussion points and citations provided above. Randy Kryn (talk) 04:29, 16 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
  • Oppose per above. Headbomb {t · c · p · b} 21:31, 16 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
  • Support (slight preference for Radius of the Earth or Radius of Earth over Earth's radius) Looking at some of the linked sources related to the radius as a constant or unit of measurement in astronomy or geophysics, I'm not seeing anything close to a clear preference for the term 'Earth radius'. For example Geodetic Reference System 1980 (pdf warning) is cited many times in the article. It uses the terms: equatorial radius of the Earth, equatorial radius, polar radius of curvature, radius of sphere of same surface, global radius, mean equatorial radius of the Earth. But never 'earth radius'. http://maia.usno.navy.mil/NSFA/NSFA_cbe.html#EarthRadius2009 uses the term 'Equatorial radius of the Earth', with the table of contents at the top linking to that section using a link labelled 'Earth Radius'. https://arxiv.org/abs/1510.07674 gives a couple fancy LaTeX symbols and says they "correspond respectively to the Earth’s “zero tide” equatorial and polar radii as adopted following[...] If equatorial vs. polar radius is not explicitly specified, it should be understood that nominal terrestrial radius refers specifically to...". The term "Earth radius" is never used. A Google scholar search (since 2015) gives the following results:
Query Results Notes
"Earth's radius" 734 Example fpos: "a smaller Earth's radius"
"Earth radius" 4,460 includes "Earth's radius" results; example fposes "decreasing rare-earth radius 18", "effective earth radius factor"(?)
"radius of Earth" 1,710 Example fpos: "Mean radius of earth electrode re (m)"(?)
"radius of the Earth" 6,500 Example fpos: "Schwarzschild radius of the Earth"
In each case, I only looked at the first two pages of results and noted any potential false positive matches (where the author seemingly wasn't talking about the earth's radius per se). I'm hesitant to take these numbers as gospel (none of the queries has perfect precision). My point is more that these are all around the same order of magnitude, and none is an obvious WP:COMMONNAME winner (at least in the context of scholarly writing). Given a variety of formulations used in RS, let's choose the one that uses plain English wording that best satisfies WP:NATURALNESS. I think that's radius of Earth radius of the Earth. Colin M (talk) 20:27, 18 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
As I said previously, I think the more natural one is "Radius of the Earth", and I see that it exceeds the usage of "Radius of Earth" by about a factor of 4 in your table. In the Google Books Ngram Viewer, it appears to have an even higher usage ratio than that (especially historically), as shown here. —BarrelProof (talk) 20:52, 19 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
As per WP:Article titles#Deciding on an article title, we have:
  • Recognizability. All of the proposals fit this.
  • Naturalness. All fit, but probably rank differently in general and even differently by context.
  • Precision. All fit.
  • Conciseness. Earth radius wins: The title is no longer than necessary to identify the article's subject and distinguish it from other subjects.
  • Consistency. Earth radius wins: The title is consistent with the pattern of similar articles' titles. As per my list above, recent aberrations notwithstanding. Strebe (talk) 18:02, 20 June 2019 (UTC)Reply
Whoops, I actually did mean to write Radius of the earth. I've updated my comment to reflect that. (Though I don't particularly mind "Radius of Earh" either.) Colin M (talk) 19:54, 20 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page or in a move review. No further edits should be made to this section.

Global mean radius of curvature

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There are several problems with the definition of the Global mean radius of curvature as defined is this article. This order of increasing importance there are:

  • The final expression could be simplified by putting it in terms of  .
  • There's no authority cited for this definition of  .
  • The area average incorrectly uses a spherical area elements. Using ellipsoidal area elements gets you a more complex expression.
  • The text talks about a "mean Gaussian curvature" and yet the mean of the radius is computed.

On the last point, it's probably makes more sense to average curvatures instead of radii of curvature. The latter is badly behaved if a portion of the surface is flat. This isn't the case here of course; but this illustrates the problem. In fact the correct area weighted mean of the Gaussian curvature is

 

(this follows from the Gauss-Bonnet theorem) and the resulting mean radius of curvature is then just the authalic radius  .

Unless some authority can be found that uses the quantity   as defined here, I recommend removing this section. An alternative is to replace is with a section giving the connection of the mean Gaussian curvature to  .

Strebe and Fgnievinski, you might want to weigh in here. cffk (talk) 21:56, 14 August 2021 (UTC)Reply

For the record,   is within 14 m of  ; to first order in the flattening, there are both equal to  . cffk (talk) 13:19, 15 August 2021 (UTC)Reply
I changed this section to use the area average of  , as discussed above. cffk (talk) 13:14, 20 August 2021 (UTC)Reply
@Cffk: thank you for your edits, it makes sense. I've taken the liberty of merging the two parts about R2 in a single section. Also, a citation would still be valuable, especially considering the previous mistaken formulation. fgnievinski (talk) 06:56, 21 September 2021 (UTC)Reply
@Fgnievinski: Sorry, I don't know of a citation that makes the connection in this way. The result is a quite straightforward consequence of Gauss-Bonnet; so if any textbook mentions it, it's likely to be as a brief mention. cffk (talk) 18:32, 21 September 2021 (UTC)Reply

Why eliminate the canonical template?

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@Kwamikagami: Can you explain this edit, please? Strebe (talk) 02:54, 30 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

The reason is that (I believe) we want that display to be stable, showing the standard astronomical symbol R🜨, but the template may change to something else, like maybe REarth as the Earth mass template is now formatted.
(The Earth symbol isn't available in the pre-installed fonts of some computers, and displays incorrectly in others, so we might end up abandoning it for general use. Unless we can get WP webfonts to pick up the slack? I don't know how they work.) — kwami (talk) 03:17, 30 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

Actual values

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In the table ("Published values") only 2 look (to me) like actual measurements.

Can you provide a few more?

In particular: distance to the shores in the Arctic and Antarctic. But also some "hot spots" like Everest, Malaysia, South Pole. (NB: I couldn’t find it with Google).

MBG02 (talk) 23:30, 6 April 2022 (UTC)Reply

Mean Earth Radius exact where ?

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With e.g. the WGS84 ellipsoid the mean Earth radius is 6,371 km.

Per the Mean value theorem is follows that there are points where this radius is exact.

Where are they? (Should be added to the article, e.g. in the form of a lattitude). Lklundin (talk) 18:46, 4 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

In relation to the earth's radius, this is not anything that appears in reliable sources, which suggests it’s not important. Without a citation, a calculation would just be original research. Strebe (talk) 15:54, 5 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
OK, thanks for checking. Lklundin (talk) 16:19, 5 September 2023 (UTC)Reply