• @bleistift2
    link
    fedilink
    English
    161 month ago

    Isn’t that also the shorter route, because you’re circling the Earth where it has less circumference?

    Also the North Atlantic Tracks are there. Might also play a role.

    Image of the North Atlantic Tracks

    • @affiliate@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      71 month ago

      it’s mathematically provable that the shortest path between any two points on a sphere will be given by a so-called “great circle”. (a great circle is basically something like the equator: one of the biggest (greatest) circles that you can draw on the surface of a sphere.) i think this is pretty unintuitive, especially because this sort of non-euclidean geometry doesn’t really come up very frequently in day to day life. but one way to think about this that on the sphere, “great circles” are the analogues of straight lines, although you’d need a bit more mathematical machinery to make that more precise.

      although in practice, some airlines might choose flight paths that aren’t great circles because of various real world factors, like wind patterns and temperature changes, etc.

      • @areyouevenreal@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        21 month ago

        You can’t fly directly in a commercial aircraft. The airspace has routes and points you have to follow. Smaller planes don’t always have to, but big planes almost always do. Altitude is one of the determining factors.