Baseline (geodesy)

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Baseline Walperswil - Sugiez , end point Sugiez, Switzerland (1869)

As a base or base line in which is Geodesy and other areas of technology a precisely measured distance referred to may be determined by the other of the position of points by angle measurement.

measurement

Distance measurement

In the optical distance measurement  - z. B. with a scissors telescope or in nautical or military location  - it is the several decimeters long "base" on whose end points the parallactic angle to the target point is measured.

Surveying

In geodesy and photogrammetry , the “base” usually represents the side of a triangle or the common side of many triangles, which - measured with high precision - gives an entire surveying network its geometric scale . Special forms of this procedure are:

  1. the classic Invar basic measurement with calibrated measuring wires to determine the scale of a triangulation . It delivers mm accuracy over many kilometers - see special article basic measurement
  2. precise electronic distance measurement between high-ranking surveying points , especially in the first-order network
  3. the previously often used distance measurement with a 2-meter base staff
  4. In terrestrial photogrammetry, the staking out of a "base" on which stereo recordings are made with the measuring camera .

photography

In photography , the basis is that line (which today only measures mm… cm) on which the measurement of a sectional image rangefinder is based. The more common type of focusing today, however, is distance measurement with an infrared beam.

Measuring equipment

Possible measuring devices for baselines are (in approximately historical order):

Especially in geodesy and astronomy:

See also