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Angular form of slope correction: If θ is the ground slope angle and l is the measured sloping distance between two points, what is the correction to reduce l to horizontal length?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: 2l sin²(θ/2)

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:

Slope measurements must be reduced to horizontal to compute plan distances and areas correctly. When the ground slope angle θ is known, the correction can be expressed in a compact trigonometric form useful for quick computations and field tables.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Slope distance measured along the ground = l.
  • Ground makes an angle θ with the horizontal.
  • We need the correction to subtract from l to obtain horizontal distance.


Concept / Approach:

The horizontal distance is D = l cos θ. The required correction c = l − D = l(1 − cos θ). Using the identity 1 − cos θ = 2 sin²(θ/2), we get c = 2l sin²(θ/2), which is convenient for small-angle work and matches series forms used in approximations.


Step-by-Step Solution:

1) Start with D = l cos θ.2) Compute correction: c = l − l cos θ.3) Apply identity: 1 − cos θ = 2 sin²(θ/2).4) Hence c = 2l sin²(θ/2).


Verification / Alternative check:

For small θ, sin(θ/2) ≈ θ/2 (in radians), giving c ≈ 2l (θ²/4) = l θ²/2, consistent with the series c ≈ h²/(2l) when h ≈ l sin θ and θ is small.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • 2l cos²(θ/2) and others do not reduce to l(1 − cos θ).
  • l sin θ gives vertical difference, not the correction.


Common Pitfalls:

  • Subtracting the wrong component (vertical instead of horizontal).


Final Answer:

2l sin²(θ/2)

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