Given: - Semi-major axis, $a = 6378137$ m - Flattening, $f = \dfrac{1}{298.224}$ We compute the semi-minor axis: \[ b = a(1 - f) = 6378137 \times \left(1 - \dfrac{1}{298.224}\right) \approx 6356751.516\,{m} \] The volume of the ellipsoid is: \[ V = \dfrac{4}{3} \pi a^2 b = \dfrac{4}{3} \pi (6378137)^2 (6356751.516) \] We equate this to the volume of a sphere with radius $R$: \[ \dfrac{4}{3} \pi R^3 = \dfrac{4}{3} \pi a^2 b \Rightarrow R^3 = a^2 b \Rightarrow R = (a^2 b)^{1/3} \] Substitute the values: \[ R = \left((6378137)^2 \times 6356751.516\right)^{1/3} \approx 6371000.77\,{m} \] Now, find the latitude on the sphere that corresponds to the same arc length from equator as $60^\circ$ latitude on the ellipsoid. Arc length on ellipsoid (meridional arc from equator to latitude $\phi$) can be numerically integrated or approximated. However, since this is asking for latitude on a sphere with equivalent arc length, we approximate by matching arc lengths: On ellipsoid: \[ M = {meridional radius of curvature at } \phi = 60^\circ \] \[ M = \frac{a(1 - e^2)}{(1 - e^2 \sin^2 \phi)^{3/2}} \] Where eccentricity squared: \[ e^2 = \frac{a^2 - b^2}{a^2} \] Use meridional arc length formula or directly use software to compute arc to $60^\circ$ latitude and find corresponding latitude on sphere of radius $R = 6371000.77$ m. This gives latitude $\approx 59.83^\circ$.
In supervised digital image classification, the number of combinations to be evaluated to select three best bands out of five bands is _____________
The following figures show three curves generated using an iterative algorithm. The total length of the curve generated after 'Iteration n' is:

Here are two analogous groups, Group-I and Group-II, that list words in their decreasing order of intensity. Identify the missing word in Group-II.
Abuse \( \rightarrow \) Insult \( \rightarrow \) Ridicule
__________ \( \rightarrow \) Praise \( \rightarrow \) Appreciate
The 12 musical notes are given as \( C, C^\#, D, D^\#, E, F, F^\#, G, G^\#, A, A^\#, B \). Frequency of each note is \( \sqrt[12]{2} \) times the frequency of the previous note. If the frequency of the note C is 130.8 Hz, then the ratio of frequencies of notes F# and C is: