navigation
{{short description|Process of monitoring and controlling the movement of a craft or vehicle from one place to another}}
{{other uses}}
File:Navigation system on a merchant ship.jpg]]
Navigation is a field of study that focuses on the process of monitoring and controlling the movement of a craft or vehicle from one place to another.Bowditch, 2003:799. The field of navigation includes four general categories: land navigation,The Handbook Of The SAS And Elite Forces. How The Professionals Fight And Win. Edited by Jon E. Lewis. p.363-Tactics And Techniques, Personal Skills And Techniques. Robinson Publishing Ltd 1997. ISBN 1-85487-675-9 marine navigation, aeronautic navigation, and space navigation.{{cite book|last=Rell Pros-Wellenhof|first=Bernhard|title=Navigation: Principles of Positioning and Guidances|year=2007|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-3-211-00828-7|pages=5–6}} It is also the term of art used for the specialized knowledge used by navigators to perform navigation tasks. All navigational techniques involve locating the navigator's position compared to known locations or patterns. Navigation, in a broader sense, can refer to any skill or study that involves the determination of position and direction. In this sense, navigation includes orienteering and pedestrian navigation.
For marine navigation, this involves the safe movement of ships, boats and other nautical craft either on or underneath the water using positions from navigation equipment with appropriate nautical charts (electronic and paper).{{cite book | title=Safe Nav Watch | publisher=Witherby Publishing Group | publication-place=Livingston, Scotland | date=2023 | isbn=978-1-914993-46-6 | page=iii}} Navigation equipment for ships is mandated under the requirements of the SOLAS Convention, depending on ship size.{{cite book | title=Safe Nav Watch | publisher=Witherby Publishing Group | publication-place=Livingston, Scotland | date=2023 | isbn=978-1-914993-46-6 | page=4}} For land navigation, this involves the movement of persons, animals and vehicles from one place to another by means of navigation equipment (such as a compass or GNSS receivers), maps and visual navigation marks across urban or rural environments.{{cite journal | title=Land-vehicle navigation using GPS | journal=Proceedings of the IEEE | date=1999-01-31 | doi=10.1109/5.736347 | url=https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/736347 | access-date=2025-02-24 | last1=Abbott | first1=E. | last2=Powell | first2=D. | volume=87 | pages=145–162 }}{{cite book | last=Hawkins | first=Pete | title=Navigation | publisher=Cicerone Press Limited | date=2024-05-13 | isbn=978-1-78362-788-2}} Aeronautic (air) navigation involves piloting an aircraft from one geographic position to another position while monitoring the position as the flight progresses.{{cite web | title=Navigation | url=https://www.faa.gov/sites/faa.gov/files/18_phak_ch16.pdf | publisher=Federal Aviation Administration | access-date=2025-02-24}}
Etymology
The term stems from the 1530s, from Latin navigationem (nom. navigatio), from navigatus, pp. of navigare "to sail, sail over, go by sea, steer a ship," from navis "ship" and the root of agere "to drive".{{Cite web |title=Etymonline - Online Etymology Dictionary |url=https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=navigation&ref=searchbar_searchhint |website=www.etymonline.com}}
History
File:Licht der Zeevaert, Frontispiz.jpg
{{Further|History of navigation}}
{{see also|History of geodesy}}
Polynesian navigation is probably the earliest form of open-ocean navigation; it was based on memory and observation recorded on scientific instruments like the Marshall Islands Stick Charts of Ocean Swells. Early Pacific Polynesians used the motion of stars, weather, the position of certain wildlife species, or the size of waves to find the path from one island to another.{{cite web | last=Vermillion | first=Stephanie | title=Polynesia's master voyagers who navigate by nature | website=BBC Home | date=2021-07-27 | url=https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20210726-polynesias-master-voyagers-who-navigate-by-nature | access-date=2025-04-18}}{{cite web | title=The history and mystery of Polynesian navigation | website=Phys.org | date=2019-03-25 | url=https://phys.org/news/2019-03-history-mystery-polynesian.html | access-date=2025-04-18}}{{cite web | last=Martins | first=Kim | title=Polynesian Navigation & Settlement of the Pacific | website=World History Encyclopedia | date=2020-08-07 | url=https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1586/polynesian-navigation--settlement-of-the-pacific/ | access-date=2025-04-18}} Among the first proper navigational instruments was the compass, with one of the oldest Chinese in origin from the Han dynasty (since c. 206 BC).Li Shu-hua, p. 176 The compass was later adopted for sea navigation by the Song dynasty Chinese during the 11th century.Kreutz, p. 367Needham, Joseph (1986) Science and civilisation in China, Vol. 4: "Physics and physical technology", Pt. 1: "Physics", Taipei. p. 252 Caves Books, originally publ. by Cambridge University Press (1962), {{ISBN|0-521-05802-3}}Li Shu-hua, p. 182f. The first usage of a compass recorded in Western Europe and the Islamic world occurred around 1190.{{Cite encyclopedia | publisher = Oxford University Press| isbn = 978-0-19-981257-8| editor= Ibrahim Kalin | last = Schmidl | first = Petra G. | title = Compass | encyclopedia = The Oxford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Science, and Technology in Islam| date = 2014| pages=144–146}}
Maritime navigation using scientific instruments such as the mariner's astrolabe first occurred in the Mediterranean during the Middle Ages. Although land astrolabes were invented in the Hellenistic period and existed in classical antiquity and the Islamic Golden Age, the oldest record of a sea astrolabe is that of Spanish astronomer Ramon Llull dating from 1295.The Ty Pros Companion to Ships and the Sea, Peter Kemp ed., 1976 {{ISBN|0-586-08308-1}} The perfecting of this navigation instrument is attributed to Portuguese navigators during early Portuguese discoveries in the Age of Discovery.{{cite book |author=Comandante Estácio dos Reis |title=Astrolábios Náuticos |year=2002 |publisher=INAPA |isbn=978-972-797-037-7}}{{cite web |url=http://www.ancruzeiros.pt/anci-astrolabio.html |title=Archived copy |access-date=2013-04-02 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121122134304/http://www.ancruzeiros.pt/anci-astrolabio.html |archive-date=2012-11-22 }} The earliest known description of how to make and use a sea astrolabe comes from Spanish cosmographer Martín Cortés de Albacar's Arte de Navegar (The Art of Navigation) published in 1551,Swanick, Lois Ann. An Analysis Of Navigational Instruments In The Age Of Exploration: 15th Century To Mid-17th century, MA Thesis, Texas A&M University, December 2005 based on the principle of the archipendulum used in constructing the Egyptian pyramids. However, the first altitude measuring instrument to navigate extensively used at sea was the quadrant.Williams, 1992:35 This was reintroduced by Leonardo of Pisa in the 13th century. Its first recorded use was in 1461 by Diogo Gomes. As well as astrolabes and quadrants, the first cross-staff used in navigation was known from the 14th century onwards, believed to have come from early Arab navigators.Williams, 1992:37 However, it had many errors and was also difficult to use as it required squinting at the sun. These disadvantages were overcome with the invention of the backstaff in 1595 by John Davis.
File:Yale's Hartmann astrolabe.jpg
Widespread open-seas navigation using the astrolabe, quadrant, backstaff and the compass started during the Age of Discovery in the 15th century. The Portuguese began systematically exploring the Atlantic coast of Africa from 1418, under the sponsorship of Prince Henry. In 1488 Bartolomeu Dias reached the Indian Ocean by this route. In 1492 the Spanish monarchs funded Christopher Columbus's expedition to sail west to reach the Indies by crossing the Atlantic, which resulted in the Discovery of the Americas. In 1498, a Portuguese expedition commanded by Vasco da Gama reached India by sailing around Africa, opening up direct trade with Asia. Soon, the Portuguese sailed further eastward, to the Spice Islands in 1512, landing in China one year later. The first circumnavigation of the earth was completed in 1522 with the Magellan-Elcano expedition, a Spanish voyage of discovery led by Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan and completed by Spanish navigator Juan Sebastián Elcano after the former's death in the Philippines in 1521.
For sailing ships, other developments took place with charting and methods to record courses.Williams, 1992:30 One of the oldest surviving marine charts is the Carta Pisana, drawn on a sheepskin, dating to 1275.Williams, 1992:28 On land, improvements in the production of maps led to improved navigation by armies, traders and other travellers.{{cite book | last=Andrews | first=John Harwood | title=Maps in Those Days | publisher=Four Courts press | publication-place=Dublin | date=2009 | isbn=978-1-84682-188-2}} For sailing ships, navigation by dead reckoning requires frequent recording of course changes and the ship tacks with the wind. To prevent paper charts, which were expensive and in the early days, rare, from being worn out, other methods were used, including the Traverse board and traverse tables (the oldest traverse tables, dates back to 1428). Quadrants were further developed by inventors such as Robert Hooke, Isaac Newton and John Hadley leading to the octant.Williams, 1992:96-97
file:Harrison's Chronometer H5.JPG]]
Developments in mathematics were also important in the history of navigation.Williams, 1992:41 These include initially meridional parts, then developments in spherical trigonometry and logarithms enabled navigators from the 1700s onwards to navigate more accurately. On land, mathematical and new instruments led to developments in Surveying and triangulation which further improved maps, as well as the construction of better roads, paths, canals and eventually railways.{{cite web | title=Evolution of surveying and surveying technology | website=Intergovernmental Committee on Surveying and Mapping | url=https://www.icsm.gov.au/education/fundamentals-land-ownership-land-boundaries-and-surveying/surveyors-and-surveying-0 | access-date=2025-04-18}}{{cite web | last=Tyrrell | first=Rachel | title=Surveying the past – the origins of surveying | website=The Survey Association | date=2023-08-16 | url=https://www.tsa-uk.org.uk/surveying-the-past-the-origins-of-surveying/ | access-date=2025-04-18}} Development of an accurate marine chronometer under John Harrison and others ensured accurate timekeeping for calculating longitude.Williams, 1992:81 Further improvements in ocean navigation led to the first proper sextant in 1757, the parts and usage developed by various inventors including Pierre Vernier and John Campbell.Williams, 1992:98 Various methods for calculation with sextant and chronometer evolved over time, beginning with the Duller method (1728) but reached their most accessible with the Douwes method (1821), the Sumner method (1837), modified by Henry Raper (1844) and the Marc St Hilaire or intercept method (1877).Williams, 1992:110-114 Modifications to the magnetic compass and better methods of determining course were also important, include developments in the compass by Matthew Flinders, Lord Kelvin and others.Williams, 1992:132-135
The sextant, together with the chronometer, compass and astronomical calculations became the most widely used methods of maritime navigation until developments in the 20th century with radio-navigation and gyrocompasses. These in turn were superseded with the advent of computers, electronic calculators and later satellite navigation in the 20th century.Williams, 1992:198 On land, the development of handheld GPS occurred in the 1980s and with the advent of smartphones, with in-build compassess and satellite receivers, navigation is now widely achieved through technology globally.{{cite web | title=Release date history | website=GPS Training | date=2024-07-19 | url=https://gpstraining.co.uk/blogs/news/outdoor-gps-units-release-date-history?srsltid=AfmBOoprplgSwqjwguO3zPnJjOKaACMATgJGNsUQKXW2ZVi2j29_ensk | access-date=2025-04-18}}{{cite web | last=Yohannes | first=Samraweet | title=Smartphones may be our greatest tool for outdoor and indoor navigation | website=CBC | date=2023-02-24 | url=https://www.cbc.ca/radio/spark/smartphones-may-be-our-greatest-tool-for-outdoor-and-indoor-navigation-1.6751354 | access-date=2025-04-18}}
Basic concepts
{{longlat}}
In terrestrial navigation, the location of a person, ship, plane, etc is defined as a position using a reference point/coordinates (see Cartesian coordinate system). Positions can either be referenced as latitude/longitude or a distance and direction from a fixed reference point (bearing).{{cite book | last=Smith | first=Philip M. | title=Terrestrial Navigation | publisher=Routledge | publication-place=London ; New York | date=2017-10-16 | isbn=978-1-317-20046-8 | page=1}} Lines of position can be derived from a variety of methods and equipment. By determining and monitoring positions it is possible to find and direct a person, ship, plane, etc in a scientific way from one place to another.{{cite web | title=navigation | website=Cambridge Dictionary | date=2025-02-19 | url=https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/navigation | access-date=2025-02-24}} This often involves the use of maps or charts from which if desired, courses can be calculated or followed depending on the projection or methods used (Rhumb line, Great circle, etc).{{cite book | last=Smith | first=Philip M. | title=Terrestrial Navigation | publisher=Routledge | publication-place=London ; New York | date=2017-10-16 | isbn=978-1-317-20046-8 | page=24}}
=Latitude=
{{Further|Latitude}}
Roughly, the latitude of a place on Earth is its angular distance north or south of the equator.Bowditch, 2003:4. Latitude is usually expressed in degrees (marked with °) ranging from 0° at the Equator to 90° at the North and South poles. The latitude of the North Pole is 90° N, and the latitude of the South Pole is 90° S. Mariners calculated latitude in the Northern Hemisphere by sighting the pole star (Polaris) with a sextant and using sight reduction tables to correct for height of eye and atmospheric refraction. The height of Polaris in degrees above the horizon is the latitude of the observer, within a degree or so.
=Longitude=
{{Further|Longitude}}
Similar to latitude, the longitude of a place on Earth is the angular distance east or west of the prime meridian or Greenwich meridian. Longitude is usually expressed in degrees (marked with °) ranging from 0° at the Greenwich meridian to 180° east and west. Sydney, for example, has a longitude of about 151° east. New York City has a longitude of 74° west. For most of history, mariners struggled to determine longitude. Longitude can be calculated if the precise time of a sighting is known. Lacking that, one can use a sextant to take a lunar distance (also called the lunar observation, or "lunar" for short) that, with a nautical almanac, can be used to calculate the time at zero longitude (see Greenwich Mean Time).
{{cite book
| last =Norie
| first =J.W.
| title =New and Complete Epitome of Practical Navigation
| year =1828
| location =London
| url =http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/initiative/ImPage.cfm?PageNum=3&BibId=13617&ChapterId=30
| access-date =2007-08-02
| page =222
| url-status=dead
| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20070927203111/http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/initiative/ImPage.cfm?PageNum=3&BibId=13617&ChapterId=30
| archive-date =2007-09-27
}} Reliable marine chronometers were unavailable until the late 18th century and not affordable until the 19th century.
{{cite book
| last =Norie
| first =J.W.
| title =New and Complete Epitome of Practical Navigation
| year =1828
| location =London
| url =http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/initiative/ImPage.cfm?PageNum=2&BibId=13617&ChapterId=30
| access-date =2007-08-02
| page =221
| url-status=dead
| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20070927202912/http://www.mysticseaport.org/library/initiative/ImPage.cfm?PageNum=2&BibId=13617&ChapterId=30
| archive-date =2007-09-27
| last = Taylor
| first = Janet
| title=An Epitome of Navigation and Nautical Astronomy
| publisher = Taylor
| edition = Ninth
| year = 1851
| url=https://archive.org/details/anepitomenaviga00taylgoog
| quote = Nautical Almanac 1849-1851.
| access-date=2007-08-02
| page = 295f
}}
{{cite book
| first=Frederick James
| last=Britten
| title = Former Clock & Watchmakers and Their Work
| year = 1894
| publisher=Spon & Chamberlain
| location = New York
|url=https://archive.org/details/formerclockwatc00britgoog
| quote=Chronometers were not regularly supplied to the Royal Navy until about 1825
|access-date=2007-08-08
| page=[https://archive.org/details/formerclockwatc00britgoog/page/n242 230]
}} For about a hundred years, from about 1767 until about 1850,Lecky, Squire, Wrinkles in Practical Navigation mariners lacking a chronometer used the method of lunar distances to determine Greenwich time to find their longitude. A mariner with a chronometer could check its reading using a lunar determination of Greenwich time.{{cite book
|last= Roberts |first= Edmund |author-link= Edmund Roberts (diplomat)
|title=1837, Embassy to the Eastern courts of Cochin-China, Siam, and Muscat: in the U.S. sloop-of-war Peacock ... during the years 1832–3–4
|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=aSgPAAAAYAAJ |publisher= Harper & brothers
|page= 373 |no-pp=
|chapter= Chapter XXIV―departure from Mozambique
|isbn=9780608404066 |chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=aSgPAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA365
|access-date= April 25, 2012
|edition= Digital
|quote= ...what I have stated, will serve to show the absolute necessity of having first rate chronometers, or the lunar observations carefully attended to; and never omitted to be taken when practicable.
}}
=Loxodrome=
{{Further|Rhumb line}}
In navigation, a rhumb line (or loxodrome) is a line crossing all meridians of longitude at the same angle, i.e. a path derived from a defined initial bearing. That is, upon taking an initial bearing, one proceeds along the same bearing, without changing the direction as measured relative to true or magnetic north.
=Piloting=
{{Further|Pilotage}}
Piloting (also called pilotage) involves navigating an aircraft by visual reference to landmarks,Federal Aviation Regulations Part 1 §1.1 or a water vessel in restricted waters and fixing its position as precisely as possible at frequent intervals.Bowditch, 2002:105. More so than in other phases of navigation, proper preparation and attention to detail are important. Procedures vary from vessel to vessel, and between military, commercial, and private vessels. As pilotage takes place in shallow waters, it typically involves following courses to ensure sufficient under keel clearance, ensuring a sufficient depth of water below the hull as well as a consideration for squat.{{cite book | last1=Gilardoni | first1=Eduardo O. | last2=Presedo | first2=Juan P. | title=Navigation in Shallow Waters | publisher=Witherby Publishing Group | publication-place=Livingston, Scotland | date=2017 | isbn=978-1-85609-667-6}} It may also involve navigating a ship within a river, canal or channel in close proximity to land.
A military navigation team will nearly always consist of several people. A military navigator might have bearing takers stationed at the gyro repeaters on the bridge wings for taking simultaneous bearings, while the civilian navigator on a merchant ship or leisure craft must often take and plot their position themselves, typically with the aid of electronic position fixing. While the military navigator will have a bearing book and someone to record entries for each fix, the civilian navigator will simply pilot the bearings on the chart as they are taken and not record them at all. If the ship is equipped with an ECDIS, it is reasonable for the navigator to simply monitor the progress of the ship along the chosen track, visually ensuring that the ship is proceeding as desired, checking the compass, sounder and other indicators only occasionally. If a pilot is aboard, as is often the case in the most restricted of waters, his judgement can generally be relied upon, further easing the workload. But should the ECDIS fail, the navigator will have to rely on his skill in the manual and time-tested procedures.
==Marine chronometer==
{{main|Marine chronometer}}
File:Breguet marine clock-CnAM 16767-1-IMG 1525-white.jpg
In order to accurately measure longitude, the precise time is required of a sextant sighting (down to the second, if possible) which is then recorded for subsequent calculation. Each second of error is equivalent to 15 seconds of longitude error, which at the equator is a position error of .25 of a nautical mile, about the accuracy limit of manual celestial navigation. The spring-driven marine chronometer is a precision timepiece used aboard ship to provide accurate time for celestial observations.Bowditch, 2002:269. A chronometer differs from a spring-driven watch principally in that it contains a variable lever device to maintain even pressure on the mainspring, and a special balance designed to compensate for temperature variations. A spring-driven chronometer is set approximately to Greenwich mean time (GMT) and is not reset until the instrument is overhauled and cleaned, usually at three-year intervals. The difference between GMT and chronometer time is carefully determined and applied as a correction to all chronometer readings. Spring-driven chronometers must be wound at about the same time each day.
Quartz crystal marine chronometers have replaced spring-driven chronometers onboard modern ships because of their greater accuracy. They are maintained on GMT directly from radio time signals. This eliminates chronometer error and watch error corrections. Should the second hand be in error by a readable amount, it can be reset electrically. The basic element for time generation is a quartz crystal oscillator. The quartz crystal is temperature compensated and is hermetically sealed in an evacuated envelope. A calibrated adjustment capability is provided to adjust for the aging of the crystal.
The chronometer is typically designed to operate for a minimum of one year on a single set of batteries. Observations may be timed and ship's clocks set with a comparing watch, which is set to chronometer time and taken to the bridge wing for recording sight times. In practice, a wrist watch coordinated to the nearest second with the chronometer will be adequate. A stop watch, either spring wound or digital, may also be used for celestial observations. In this case, the watch is started at a known GMT by chronometer, and the elapsed time of each sight added to this to obtain GMT of the sight. All chronometers and watches should be checked regularly with a radio time signal. Times and frequencies of radio time signals are listed in publications such as Radio Navigational Aids.
==The marine sextant==
File:Marine sextant.svg is used to measure the elevation of celestial bodies above the horizon.]]
{{Further|Sextant}}
The second critical component of celestial navigation is to measure the angle formed at the observer's eye between the celestial body and the sensible horizon. The sextant, an optical instrument, is used to perform this function. The sextant consists of two primary assemblies. The frame is a rigid triangular structure with a pivot at the top and a graduated segment of a circle, referred to as the "arc", at the bottom. The second component is the index arm, which is attached to the pivot at the top of the frame. At the bottom is an endless vernier which clamps into teeth on the bottom of the "arc". The optical system consists of two mirrors and, generally, a low power telescope. One mirror, referred to as the "index mirror" is fixed to the top of the index arm, over the pivot. As the index arm is moved, this mirror rotates, and the graduated scale on the arc indicates the measured angle ("altitude").{{cite book | last=House | first=D.J. | title=Seamanship Techniques | publisher=Routledge | publication-place=London | date=2013-11-12 | isbn=978-1-135-08015-0 | page=350-252}} The second mirror, referred to as the "horizon glass", is fixed to the front of the frame. One half of the horizon glass is silvered and the other half is clear. Light from the celestial body strikes the index mirror and is reflected to the silvered portion of the horizon glass, then back to the observer's eye through the telescope. The observer manipulates the index arm so the reflected image of the body in the horizon glass is just resting on the visual horizon, seen through the clear side of the horizon glass.
There are three main errors that must be corrected in order to each usage for navigation. The main errors are perpendicular error, side error and index error. Adjustment of the sextant consists of checking and aligning all the optical elements to eliminate the overall "index error" (or index correction). Index correction should be checked, using the horizon or more preferably a star, each time the sextant is used. The practice of taking celestial observations from the deck of a rolling ship, often through cloud cover and with a hazy horizon, is by far the most challenging part of celestial navigation.{{Cite web |title=How Did Aviators "Shoot" the Sun and Stars? {{!}} Time and Navigation |url=http://timeandnavigation.si.edu/navigating-air/challenges/overcoming-challenges/celestial-navigation |access-date=2023-06-12 |website=timeandnavigation.si.edu |language=en}}
==Bubble octant==
Until the widespread usage of technologies such as inertial navigation systems, VHF omnidirectional range and GNSS, air navigators used the Bubble octant or bubble sextant.{{cite book | author=United States. Navy Department | title=Air Navigation: Flying Training | publisher=Air Training Command in accordance with AFR 5-6 | series=Air Force AFM | year=1983 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Te-mFCmtDOwC | access-date=2025-02-25 | page=16-1}} Using this instrument to take sights, mathematical calculations could then be carried out to determine the past position of the aircraft.{{cite book | last=Wolper | first=James S. | title=Understanding Mathematics for Aircraft Navigation | publisher=McGraw Hill Professional | date=2001-06-13 | isbn=978-0-07-163879-1 | page=109-150}}
Navigation processes
= Passage planning =
{{Main|Passage planning}}
File:Exval.jpegPassage planning or voyage planning is a procedure to develop a complete description of vessel's voyage from start to finish. The plan includes leaving the dock and harbor area, the en route portion of a voyage, approaching the destination, and mooring. According to international law, a vessel's captain is legally responsible for passage planning,{{cite web
| title = Regulation 34 – Safe Navigation
| url = https://mcanet.mcga.gov.uk/public/c4/solas/solas_v/Regulations/regulation34.htm
| work = IMO RESOLUTION A.893(21) adopted on 25 November 1999
| access-date = March 26, 2007
| archive-date = 27 September 2007
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070927002958/https://mcanet.mcga.gov.uk/public/c4/solas/solas_v/Regulations/regulation34.htm
| url-status = dead
}} however on larger vessels, the task will be delegated to the ship's navigator.{{cite web
| title = ANNEX 24 – MCA Guidance Notes for Voyage Planning
| url = https://mcanet.mcga.gov.uk/public/c4/solas/solas_v/Annexes/Annex24.htm
| work = IMO RESOLUTION A.893(21) adopted on 25 November 1999
| access-date = March 26, 2007
| archive-date = 27 September 2007
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070927002748/https://mcanet.mcga.gov.uk/public/c4/solas/solas_v/Annexes/Annex24.htm
| url-status = dead
}}
Studies show that human error is a factor in 80 percent of navigational accidents and that in many cases the human making the error had access to information that could have prevented the accident. The practice of voyage planning has evolved from penciling lines on nautical charts to a process of risk management.
Passage planning consists of four stages: appraisal, planning, execution, and monitoring, which are specified in International Maritime Organization Resolution A.893(21), Guidelines For Voyage Planning,{{cite web
| title = ANNEX 25 – MCA Guidance Notes for Voyage Planning
| url = https://mcanet.mcga.gov.uk/public/c4/solas/solas_v/Annexes/Annex25.htm
| work = IMO RESOLUTION A.893(21) adopted on 25 November 1999
| access-date = January 28, 2011
| archive-date = 24 July 2011
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110724014258/https://mcanet.mcga.gov.uk/public/c4/solas/solas_v/Annexes/Annex25.htm
| url-status = dead
}} and these guidelines are reflected in the local laws of IMO signatory countries (for example, Title 33 of the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations), and a number of professional books or publications. There are some fifty elements of a comprehensive passage plan depending on the size and type of vessel.
The appraisal stage deals with the collection of information relevant to the proposed voyage as well as ascertaining risks and assessing the key features of the voyage. This will involve considering the type of navigation required e.g. Ice navigation, the region the ship will be passing through and the hydrographic information on the route. In the next stage, the written plan is created. The third stage is the execution of the finalised voyage plan, taking into account any special circumstances which may arise such as changes in the weather, which may require the plan to be reviewed or altered. The final stage of passage planning consists of monitoring the vessel's progress in relation to the plan and responding to deviations and unforeseen circumstances.
= Integrated bridge systems =
File:Integriertes Brückensystem.jpg
Electronic integrated bridge concepts are driving future navigation system planning. Integrated systems take inputs from various ship sensors, electronically display positioning information, and provide control signals required to maintain a vessel on a preset course. The navigator becomes a system manager, choosing system presets, interpreting system output, and monitoring vessel response.
File:Two ship's officers 'shoot' in one morning with the sextant, the sun altitude.jpg
=Ships and similar vessels=
=Artificial intelligence=
Artificial intelligence can be utilised to assist with planning, problem-serving and decision-making processes in navigation.{{cite conference | last=Duffany | first=Jeffrey L. | title=2010 2nd International Conference on Software Technology and Engineering | chapter=Artificial intelligence in GPS navigation systems | publisher=IEEE | year=2010 | doi=10.1109/icste.2010.5608862 | page=| isbn=978-1-4244-8667-0 }}{{cite book | last1=Jindal | first1=R. | last2=Mittal | first2=S.K. | title=Artificial Intelligence: Application and Real-Time Use | publisher=Codex International Publishers | year=2023 | isbn=978-93-94799-24-0 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hKzEEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA45 | access-date=2025-02-24 | page=45}} This includes using AI in navigation systems such as GNSS as well as in general computing to assist with position fixing and monitoring from one position to another such as in vehicles, planes and cars.{{cite journal | last1=Viveiros | first1=Inês | last2=Silva | first2=Hélder | last3=Andrade | first3=Yuri | last4=Pendão | first4=Cristiano | title=Smart GNSS Integrity Monitoring for Road Vehicles: An Overview of AI Methods | journal=IEEE Access | volume=13 | date=2025 | issn=2169-3536 | doi=10.1109/ACCESS.2025.3534659 | doi-access=free | pages=20278–20296| bibcode=2025IEEEA..1320278V }}{{cite book | last=Yu | first=K. | title=Positioning and Navigation Using Machine Learning Methods | publisher=Springer Nature Singapore | series=Navigation: Science and Technology | year=2024 | isbn=978-981--976199-9 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ovYhEQAAQBAJ&pg=PA32 | access-date=2025-02-24 | page=32}}
Standards, training and organisations
Professional standards for navigation depend on the type of navigation and vary by country. For marine navigation, Merchant Navy deck officers are trained and internationally certified according to the STCW Convention.{{cite book |title=Standards of Training and Certification of Watchkeeping' (STCW) Convention |publisher= International Maritime Organization|date= 2010 }} Leisure and amateur mariners may undertake lessons in navigation at local/regional training schools. Naval officers receive navigation training as part of their naval training.
In land navigation, courses and training is often provided to young persons as part of general or extra-curricular education. Land navigation is also an essential part of army training. Additionally, organisations such as the Scouts and DoE programme teach navigation to their students. Orienteering organisations are a type of sports that require navigational skills using a map and compass to navigate from point to point in diverse and usually unfamiliar terrain whilst moving at speed.{{cite web
|url = http://www.orienteering.ca/about_orienteering.htm
|title = About Orienteering
|publisher = The Canadian Orienteering Federation
|access-date = 2008-08-11
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081002091244/http://www.orienteering.ca/about_orienteering.htm
|archive-date = 2008-10-02
}}
In aviation, pilots undertake air navigation training as part of learning to fly.
Professional organisations also assist to encourage improvements in navigation or bring together navigators in learned environments. The Royal Institute of Navigation (RIN) is a learned society with charitable status, aimed at furthering the development of navigation on land and sea, in the air and in space. It was founded in 1947 as a forum for mariners, pilots, engineers and academics to compare their experiences and exchange information.{{Cite journal|year=2016|title=The Royal Institute of Navigation - Aims and Objects|journal=Journal of Navigation|volume=69|issue=66|pages= b1–b2 }} In the US, the Institute of Navigation (ION) is a non-profit professional organisation advancing the art and science of positioning, navigation and timing.{{cite web
| title = The Institute of Navigation
| url = https://www.ion.org/about/index.cfm
| access-date=February 6, 2020}}
=Publications=
File:Bowditch 1910 Figure 2 Compass Rose navigatorpracti00bowdrich 0021.jpg
Numerous nautical publications are available on navigation, which are published by professional sources all over the world. In the UK, the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office, the Witherby Publishing Group and the Nautical Institute provide numerous navigational publications, including the comprehensive Admiralty Manual of Navigation.{{cite web
| title = The Admiralty Manual of Navigation
| publisher = The Nautical Institute
| url = https://www.nautinst.org/shop/the-admiralty-manual-of-navigation-vol-1-principles-of-navigation.html
| access-date=February 6, 2020}}{{cite web
| title = Navigation Publications
| publisher = Witherby Publishing Group
| url = https://www.witherbyseamanship.com/categories/navigation.html
| access-date=February 6, 2020}}
In the US, Bowditch's American Practical Navigator is a free available encyclopedia of navigation issued by the US Government.{{cite web
| title = The American Practical Navigator
| url = https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_American_Practical_Navigator
| access-date=February 6, 2020}}
Navigation in spatial cognition
Navigation is an essential everyday activity that involves a series of abilities that help humans and animals to locate, track, and follow paths in order to arrive at different destinations.{{Cite journal |date=November 2017 |title=Focus on spatial cognition |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/nn.4666 |journal=Nature Neuroscience |language=en |volume=20 |issue=11 |pages=1431 |doi=10.1038/nn.4666 |pmid=29073640 |s2cid=205441391 |issn=1546-1726}}{{Cite journal |last1=Wolbers |first1=Thomas |last2=Hegarty |first2=Mary |date=March 2010 |title=What determines our navigational abilities? |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1364661310000021 |journal=Trends in Cognitive Sciences |language=en |volume=14 |issue=3 |pages=138–146 |doi=10.1016/j.tics.2010.01.001|pmid=20138795 |s2cid=15142890 }} Navigation, in spatial cognition, allows for acquiring information about the environment by using the body and landmarks of the environment as frames of references to create mental representations of our environment, also known as a cognitive map. Humans navigate by transitioning between different spaces and coordinating both egocentric and allocentric frames of reference.
Navigation can be distinguished into two sptial components: locomotion and wayfinding.{{Citation |last=Montello |first=Daniel R. |title=Navigation |date=2005-07-18 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/9780511610448%23c80710-dcz-s9i-re2-gh5/type/book_part |work=The Cambridge Handbook of Visuospatial Thinking |pages=257–294 |editor-last=Shah |editor-first=Priti |edition=1 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |doi=10.1017/cbo9780511610448.008 |isbn=978-0-511-61044-8 |access-date=2022-05-06 |editor2-last=Miyake |editor2-first=Akira}} Locomotion is the process of movement from one place to another, both in humans and in animals. Locomotion helps you understand an environment by moving through a space in order to create a mental representation of it.{{Cite web |title=APA Dictionary of Psychology/Locomotion |url=https://dictionary.apa.org/locomotion |access-date=2022-05-06 |website=dictionary.apa.org |language=en}} Wayfinding is defined as an active process of following or deciding upon a path between one place to another through mental representations.{{Cite journal |last=GOLLEDGE |first=Reginald G. |date=December 2000 |title=Cognitive Maps, Spatial Abilities, and Human Wayfinding |url=https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/7262/1/RK-Cognitive.pdf |journal=Geographical Review of Japan |volume=73 |pages=93–104}} It involves processes such as representation, planning and decision which help to avoid obstacles, to stay on course or to regulate pace when approaching particular objects.{{Cite journal |last=Tolman |first=Edward C. |date=1948 |title=Cognitive maps in rats and men. |url=http://doi.apa.org/getdoi.cfm?doi=10.1037/h0061626 |journal=Psychological Review |language=en |volume=55 |issue=4 |pages=189–208 |doi=10.1037/h0061626 |pmid=18870876 |issn=1939-1471}}
Navigation and wayfinding can be approached in the environmental space. According to Dan Montello’s space classification, there are four levels of space with the third being the environmental space. The environmental space represents a very large space, like a city, and can only be fully explored through movement since all objects and space are not directly visible.{{Cite book |last=Denis |first=Michel |url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9781351596183 |title=Space and Spatial Cognition: A Multidisciplinary Perspective |date=2017-11-13 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-315-10380-8 |edition=1 |language=en |doi=10.4324/9781315103808}} Also Barbara Tversky systematized the space, but this time taking into consideration the three dimensions that correspond to the axes of the human body and its extensions: above/below, front/back and left/right. Tversky ultimately proposed a fourfold classification of navigable space: space of the body, space around the body, space of navigation and space of graphics.{{Cite journal |last=Tversky |first=Barbara |date=January 2003 |title=Structures Of Mental Spaces: How People Think About Space |url=http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0013916502238865 |journal=Environment and Behavior |language=en |volume=35 |issue=1 |pages=66–80 |doi=10.1177/0013916502238865 |s2cid=16647328 |issn=0013-9165}}
=Wayfinding=
There are two types of wayfinding in navigation: aided and unaided. Aided wayfinding requires a person to use various types of media, such as maps, GPS, directional signage, etc., in their navigation process which generally involves low spatial reasoning and is less cognitively demanding. Unaided wayfinding involves no such devices for the person who is navigating. Unaided wayfinding can be subdivided into a taxonomy of tasks depending on whether it is undirected or directed, which basically makes the distinction of whether there is a precise destination or not: undirected wayfinding means that a person is simply exploring an environment for pleasure without any set destination.{{Cite journal |last1=Wiener |first1=Jan M. |last2=Büchner |first2=Simon J. |last3=Hölscher |first3=Christoph |date=2009-05-20 |title=Taxonomy of Human Wayfinding Tasks: A Knowledge-Based Approach |url=http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13875860902906496 |journal=Spatial Cognition & Computation |language=en |volume=9 |issue=2 |pages=152–165 |doi=10.1080/13875860902906496 |bibcode=2009SpCC....9..152W |s2cid=16529538 |issn=1387-5868}}
Directed wayfinding, instead, can be further subdivided into search vs. target approximation. Search means that a person does not know where the destination is located and must find it either in an unfamiliar environment, which is labeled as an uninformed search, or in a familiar environment, labeled as an informed search. In target approximation, on the other hand, the location of the destination is known to the navigator but a further distinction is made based on whether the navigator knows how to arrive or not to the destination. Path following means that the environment, the path, and the destination are all known which means that the navigator simply follows the path they already know and arrive at the destination without much thought. For example, when you are in your city and walking on the same path as you normally take from your house to your job or university. However, path finding means that the navigator knows where the destination is but does not know the route they have to take to arrive at the destination: you know where a specific store is but you do not know how to arrive there or what path to take. If the navigator does not know the environment, it is called path search which means that only the destination is known while neither the path nor the environment is: you are in a new city and need to arrive at the train station but do not know how to get there. Path planning, on the other hand, means that the navigator knows both where the destination is and is familiar with the environment so they only need to plan the route or path that they should take to arrive at their target. For example, if you are in your city and need to get to a specific store that you know the destination of but do not know the specific path you need to take to get there.
See also
{{Portal|Geography}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Bibliography
{{refbegin}}
- [https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/ Nathaniel Bowditch, The American Practical Navigator, (2002) by the United States government]
- {{cite book | last = Anwar | first = Nadeem | title = Navigation Advanced for Mates and Masters | edition = 2nd | date = 2015 | publisher = Witherby Publishing Group | location = Edinburgh | isbn = 978-1-85609-627-0}}
- {{cite book
| last = Cutler
| first = Thomas J.
| title = Dutton's Nautical Navigation
| edition = 15th
| date = December 2003
| publisher = Naval Institute Press
| location = Annapolis, MD
| isbn = 978-1-55750-248-3
}}
- {{cite book| author =Department of the Air Force| author-link =United States Air Force| title =Air Navigation| url =http://www.e-publishing.af.mil/pubfiles/af/11/afpam11-216/afpam11-216.pdf| access-date =2007-04-17| date =March 2001| publisher =Department of the Air Force| url-status=dead| archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20070325022639/http://www.e-publishing.af.mil/pubfiles/af/11/afpam11-216/afpam11-216.pdf| archive-date =2007-03-25}}
- {{cite book
| last = Great Britain Ministry of Defence (Navy)
| title = Admiralty Manual of Seamanship
| publisher = The Stationery Office
| year = 1995
| isbn = 978-0-11-772696-3
}}
- {{cite book | last1=Gilardoni | first1=Eduardo O. | last2=Presedo | first2=Juan P. | title=Navigation in Shallow Waters | publisher=Witherbys | publication-place=Livingston, Scotland | date=2017 | isbn=978-1-85609-667-6}}
- {{cite book|author1=Bernhard Hofmann-Wellenhof|author2=K. Legat|author3=M. Wieser|title=Navigation: principles of positioning and guidance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=losWr9UDRasC|access-date=7 February 2012|year=2003|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-3-211-00828-7}}
- {{cite book
| last = Maloney
| first = Elbert S.
| title = Chapman Piloting and Seamanship
| url = https://archive.org/details/chapmanpilotings00elbe_1
| edition = 64th
| date = December 2003
| publisher = Hearst Communications Inc.
| location = New York
| isbn = 978-1-58816-089-8
| url-access = registration
}}
- {{cite book
|author=National Imagery and Mapping Agency
|author-link=National Imagery and Mapping Agency
|title=Publication 1310: Radar Navigation and Maneuvering Board Manual
|url=http://www.nga.mil/portal/site/maritime/
|format=PDF
|edition=7th
|year=2001
|publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office
|location=Bethesda, MD
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070307132409/http://www.nga.mil/portal/site/maritime/
|archive-date=2007-03-07
}}
- {{cite book
| last = Turpin
| first = Edward A.
| author2 = McEwen, William A.
| title = Merchant Marine Officers' Handbook
| edition = 4th
| year = 1980
| publisher = Cornell Maritime Press
| location = Centreville, MD
| isbn = 978-0-87033-056-8
}}
- {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Navigation|volume=19|pages=284–298|first=William Robert|last=Martin}}
- {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Pytheas|volume=22|pages=703–704|first1=Edward Herbert|last1=Bunbury|author-link=Edward Bunbury|first2=Charles Raymond|last2=Beazley|author-link2=Raymond Beazley}}
- {{Citation | last1 =Raol| first1 =Jitendra | last2 =Gopal | first2 =Ajith | year =2013 | title =Mobile Intelligent Autonomous Systems | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=HaS91phGuRQC&q=sanskrit+navgati&pg=PA141 | publisher = CRC Press Taylor and Francis Group |location=Boca Raton, FL | isbn =978-1-4398-6300-8 }}
- {{cite book | last=Williams | first=J. E. D. | title=From Sails to Satellites | publisher=Oxford University Press, USA | publication-place=Oxford | date=1992 | isbn=0-19-856387-6}}
{{refend}}
External links
{{wikiquote}}
{{Commons}}
{{Wikisource|Portal:Navigation}}
{{Wikivoyage}}
- [https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/27642 Lectures in Navigation] by Ernest Gallaudet Draper
- [https://archive.today/20121208170816/http://alsworld.topcities.com/bwgg/index.html How to navigate with less than a compass or GPS] (archived 8 December 2012)
{{Geodesy navbox|state=uncollapsed}}
{{Orienteering|type=collapsed}}
{{Seamanship}}
{{Satellite navigation systems}}
{{Authority control}}