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Error Distribution in Navigation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 1976

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In an earlier paper the present writer drew attention to the distinction between mixed and aggregated distributions. Incidentally, two minor mis-statements in that paper should be corrected. The first sentence in the last paragraph of section 2 (page 72) should read ‘As σ21 (=k say) tends to either zero or infinity, X/σ increases indefinitely; whilst for k nearer unity, X/σ is smaller’. Also the last line of the Appendix should not terminate with ‘X/σ = 3·724’ but with ‘X/σ→∞’.

Mixed distributions arise when for example an error occurs either from one distribution with probability p, or from another with probability 1–p, as in a set of position line errors due sometimes to one and sometimes to the other of a pair of observers of differing precision. An aggregate distribution occurs when the error consists of, say, two sub-errors, one from each of the two distributions; as when Captain Flint marks the chart and Long John subsequently reads it.

Type
Forum
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1976

References

REFERENCE

1Anderson, O. D. (1976). On error distributions in navigation. This Journal, 29, 69Google Scholar