In the previous problem, 'Pythagoras on a sphere', you showed
that for a right-angled spherical triangle with sides a, b and c
drawn on a sphere of radius R we have the relationship
a) By expanding cos(x) using the approximation
show that for small triangles on large spheres the usual flat Pythagoras's theorem approximately holds.
b) In a flat salt-plane a large right angled triangle is drawn
with shorter sides equal to 10km. Approximating the radius of the
Earth to be 6000km, what is the percentage error in the length of
the hypotenuse calculated using Pythagoras's theorem?
c) Two radio transmitters A and B are located at a distance x
from each other on the equator. A third transmitter C is located
at a distance x due north of A. A telecoms engineer who doesn't
know about about spherical triangles needs to lay a cable between
B and C and calculates the distance using the flat version of the
Pythagoras's theorem.
Investigate the differencesand percentage errors given by the two
Pythagoras theorems for different distances x. At what value of x
is the percentage error to the true length of cable required
greater than 0.1%?
Do you conclude that telecoms engineers need to know about
spherical triangles?