Not exact matches
Reproducing an exact driving
path from this limited and basic information is challenging — and it is less
precise than
using GPS or cellular signal tracking measurements.
Astronomers plotted Proxima Centauri's
precise path in the heavens and predicted the two close encounters
using data from Hubble.
Using precise positional data from the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) and from optical telescopes, Felix Mirabel, an astrophysicist at the Institute for Astronomy and Space Physics of Argentina and French Atomic Energy Commission, and Irapuan Rodrigues, also of the French Atomic Energy Commission, calculated that Scorpius X-1 is not orbiting the Milky Way's center in step with most other stars, but instead follows an eccentric
path far above and below the Galaxy's plane.
One
path to advanced nanotechnologies begins with
using scanning probe microscopes (SPM) to make atomically
precise surface modifications — see, for example p. xii of Productive Nanosystems: A Technology Roadmap.
Now, suppose that this curve fit were
used to predict the drunkard's
precise path home on subsequent trips.