Definition
WGS-84 is the global reference system used by GPS to define positions on Earth. It specifies a mathematical model of the Earth's shape (a reference ellipsoid), a fixed coordinate system tied to the Earth's center, and a standard way of expressing latitude, longitude, and altitude. All GPS-derived positions and aeronautical charts used for GPS navigation are based on this single, worldwide standard.
Plain English
WGS-84 is the agreed-upon map of the Earth that GPS uses. It tells the system exactly what shape the Earth is and how to measure positions on it, so that every GPS receiver and every chart speaks the same coordinate language.
Context Anchor
You see WGS-84 in GPS navigation, database, and chart-coordinate discussions, especially when making sure a stored position matches what the GPS is using.
Derivation
Geodetic comes from the Greek geodaisia, meaning 'division of the Earth' — the science of measuring the Earth's shape and size. The 1984 in the name marks the year this particular worldwide standard was adopted, replacing earlier regional systems that didn't always agree with each other.
Why Pilots Care
Ensures GPS-derived positions align with aeronautical charts and procedures worldwide, reducing the risk of navigation errors.
Analogy
It is like everyone agreeing to use the same map grid before giving directions. Without the same grid, the numbers may look precise but still point to slightly different places.
Grounding Statement
When your GPS shows a latitude and longitude, WGS-84 is the Earth reference behind those numbers.
Intuition Check
WGS-84 is not a GPS receiver model or a satellite signal. It is the Earth reference frame that GPS positions are based on.
Example Sentence 1
All waypoints in the GPS database are stored in WGS-84 coordinates, ensuring they match the published instrument approach charts.
Example Sentence 2
Before loading an approach, the pilot confirmed the navigation database used the WGS-84 datum.