MichaelJ said:GO (or anyone else) can correct me if I'm wrong, but I've heard that the only peak on which you can see both Washington and Katahdin is Abraham, and that by the same token Abraham is the reason you can't see Washington from Katahdin and vice-versa.
RGF1 said:Is there some Math formula to figure this out please make it easy to understand . I am sure there is . I also imagine you can figure in the quality of the atmosphere and other things .
This is an application of the Pythagorean theorem (the old "a squared + b squared = c squared" thingy). If you draw a circle with the radius of the earth R, and a tower sticking up with height h, then draw a tangent line from the tower to the circle, and let "d" be the distance from the tower to this farthest point of view at the tangent point. This forms a right triangle with sides R and d, and hypoteneuse R+h. So the equation is d = sqrt((R+h)*(R+h) - R*R) = sqrt(h*h+2*R*h). For small towers/ships/mountains relative to the earth's diameter, you can simplify this (approximately) to get d = sqrt(2*R*h). The earth's average radius R = 6371km. So if you are on Mt Washington h = 1917m = 1.917km, so d = sqrt(2*6371*1.917)=156.3km.DougPaul said:Yes, there is such an equation, unfortuantely I don't remember it.RGF1 said:Is there some Math formula to figure this out please make it easy to understand . I am sure there is . I also imagine you can figure in the quality of the atmosphere and other things .
IIRC, it is of the form of "constant * sqrt(height)"
Sailers use it, for instance, to calculate how far away they can see a lighthouse of known height. You might be able to find it by searching in sailing references.
IIRC, the standard formula includes a correction for the average atmospheric refraction. Of course, it can vary considerably depending on temp and humidity profiles.arghman said:This neglects variation in the earth's radius, as well as atmospheric haze and optical bending effects (I seem to remember that light can get bent along the edge of the atmosphere if you're talking hundreds of km)
blueridge said:Just in case the link goes away.
Papa Bear said:And has anyone seen Katahdin from Cadillac on MDI? Saw it once.
blueridge said:Just in case the link goes away.
I think I can see Tom Brady in the pic, he looks awfully afraid of the Steeler Defense
w7xman said:...Megantic is visible as well, I think about 82 miles.
sapblatt said:The Steelers had a defense? I did not notice...
blueridge said:Enough about football (says the fan of the losing team) back to hikin' talk!
Rugger said:Supposedly Mt Megantic is the only place you can see Mansfield, Washington and Katahdin.
Breeze said:Yes, I have seen Katahdin from the summit of Cadillac, perhaps 3 or 4 times in my lifetime ( please realize that in all of my growing-up I spent 4-6 weeks each summer in the Frenchman's Bay area, and I'm now past 50) so could pick and choose days to be on Caddy Summit.
I have seen Mt Washington clearly from some high points on the ridge roads en route from Belfast towards Waterville/ China Lakes/Fairfield.
I remember hearing my < late> grandfather insist that Washington was visible from Cadillac, but he was one of a kind
Understand that that was wayyyy before smog became an issue, going back to the early 1960's.
Breeze
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