- #106
turin
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They are not hard for me to visualize, even on a "chart" (I think that's the term I'm looking for, a piece of the manifold that is presented as a flat map). The issue I have with lat. & long. is that, if I look at a map of Scandanavia, for instance, I see this lat. & lon. coordinate system dramatically curved, but I see no good reason for it in the context of the chart. If I were to extend myself into 3-D and look at Scandanavia on the globe, then I would definitely have no problem understanding why these lines were curved, but that entails considering Scandanavia as residing on a globe in R3, which is a higher D space than what I should be considering.Originally posted by Ambitwistor
What's so hard about visualizing lines of latitude and longitude? Why do you need a higher dimensional space?
I thought that a coordinate system had a set of basis vectors. I must be very confused about what a coordinate system is.Originally posted by Ambitwistor
What do tangent spaces have to do with coordinate systems?
It specifies to me that Houston is 300 miles directly in front of me. How much more specific can one be about location? Specifying the distance in degrees of lattitude I find less specific, in the sense that I have a standard for the mile that will tell me how many times my tires will have to rotate before I get there, whereas I don't have a standard for a degree of lattitude that will tell me anything at all about the duration of my trip in terms of tire rotation or anything else. I would have to know what the radius of the Earth was, and that, again, seems to suggest required knowledge about the 3-D situation.Originally posted by Ambitwistor
A sign that says "Houston, 300 miles" doesn't specify the location of Houston, relative to you or anything else. So what does this have to do with coordinate systems?
So do I jump from one to another? Where am I in between tangent planes?Originally posted by Ambitwistor
You don't "take a tangent plane with you". A tangent plane is associated with a point in space; it doesn't go anywhere.