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Avenue Visibility

Page history last edited by Placement Student 01 7 years, 6 months ago

Avenue Visibility 

The visibility varies from how much something stands out from the horizon. For example the higher altitude something is then you’re going to be able to see it clearer than something with a low altitude. To find out more about the motivation and reasoning why click here. 

Here shows the visibility changes from the beginning of the avenue, to the first turning, to the second turning and at the end, the picture will also show the perfect horizon at 0 degrees altitude and another at 1 degrees altitude (how high something is above the horizon). It will show the azimuth as well (how far along something is along the horizon, North being 0 degrees, South being 180 degrees) and the altitude. 

This shows where the beginning of the avenue is (red), the first turn (blue), the second turn (black) and the end of the avenue (red and blue).

 

Below will show the visibility from each point as if you are there and will describe how far out you can see. 

 

 

 This shows the visibility of the peak from the beginning of the avenue. The two lines going along show the 0 degrees altitude (bottom line) and the 1 degree altitude (top line). You can see up to 25 miles North from here, 1.8 miles East, 11 miles South and 9.6 miles West. From this point also you can see the sun set where the vertical line is and the red mark along the horizon in mid summer. 
 This one shows the visibility of the peak from the first turning on the avenue. You can see that almost everything is above the horizon and where the sun will set. You can see up to 25 miles North, 0.6 miles East (you can see this where North East and East has a plain image indicating that there's something close blocking the view), 14 miles South and 9 miles West. 
 This one shows the visibility of the peak from the second turning. As you can see there are 2 parts at either side that are close to you however everything else that is near the middle is further away. From here you can only see up to 0.14 miles North, 8 miles East, 4 miles South and 9 miles West. You can also see where the sun will set which is near the parts that are closer to you, if they weren't there you would notice that the sun would have a bigger azimuth as it would be closer to North.
  This picture shows the visibility from the end of the avenue. You can also see in North-East that there's a straight block before sloping down, that is Gib Hill which has an altitude of 4.3 degrees. From this site you can see up to 0.14 miles North, 0.30 miles East, 5 miles South and 8 miles West. You cannot see as much because the end of the avenue is flat ground and is also blocked by Gib Hill and a row of trees to the North-West to South-West.

 

 

 

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