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Absolute Altitude
Absolute altitude is obtained by the use of radar. The first
radar altimeter was the A/N 718. I worked with it during WWII.
It consisted of two one-foot long antennae that were placed about
20 feet apart under the wings on each side of the aircraft fuselage.
This was a frequency modulation system, which transmitted a burst
of radio energy to the ground through one antenna and picked
up the burst echo from the ground on the other antenna. During
the transmission period the frequency was undergoing a constant
rate of change in microseconds. The receiver measures the frequency
change difference between the first burst and the frequency when
it returns to the aircraft receiver. This amount of change is
recorded and displayed in feet on a circular cathode ray-tube
display. I would suspect that the ground proximity warning system
(GPWS) system used on airliners works much the same. Doppler
radar uses frequency modulation today but to my knowledge this
was the first practical use of FM technology.
Written by Gene Whitt
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