Many problems in navigation can be best viewed and solved as
problems in analytical geometry. We only need to understand the geometry
of two
‘navigable’ surfaces; the sphere and the ellipsoid of
revolution. The ellipsoidal model
is generated by revolving an ellipse about its minor axis and this model
is used as a global
model for the surface of the Earth. The eccentricity of the meridian ellipse
is small
(≈0·082) so we sometimes refer to this surface as a
‘spheroid’ since the surface is still
‘sphere-like’. The physical Earth is, in fact, referred to
as a
‘geoid’ whose surface is
that which approximates global mean sea level. The mathematical representation
of the
geoid is not trivial and the ellipsoid of revolution is an extremely good
approximation
to it.