There will be no apparent relative motion between your aircraft and the other aircraft. The radar readings should enable the pilots to avoid a collision between aircrafts.
The standard answer is constant bearing. As soon as a another vessel is sighted at sea, you take a compass bearing on it, and you keep on taking compass bearings. If the bearing does not change, you are on a collision course. If it's on your port side, do nothing. If it's on your starboard side, give way by changing speed or course.
Collision Course - novel - was created in 1961.
The duration of Collision Course - film - is 1.67 hours.
Collision Course - film - was created in 1989-04.
Collision Course - novel - has 224 pages.
Read and understand the Collision Avoidance regulations, which are international. The simplest rule on open water is that if you are crossing the course of another boat so that it seems there might be a collision, then if the other boat is on your starboard side (the right), you must do something to avoid a collision, which could be that you slow down or you might alter course to starboard. If you have the other boat on your port side (the left), you just have to carry on as normal. A good test to check for the possibility of a collision is to watch the direction that the other boat is in, relative to you. If the direction does not change, you are on a collision course.
The size, speed, location and angle of impact of the object with the Earth. A major factor would be if the impact is on water or land.
Collision Course - 2012 TV was released on: USA: 25 March 2012
The Making of Collision Course - 2011 TV is rated/received certificates of: Australia:PG
Bigfoot Collision Course - 2008 VG was released on: USA: 28 October 2008
Known Universe - 2009 Collision Course was released on: USA: 20 December 2009
It enables aircraft with a receiving unit to determine their position and stay on course by receiving radio signals transmitted by a network of fixed ground radio beacons.