Dictionary Definition
altimeter n : an instrument that measures the
height above ground; used in navigation
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
UK: əltĭmētərUS: əltəmētər
Translations
- Chinese: 测高仪
- Dutch: hoogtemeter
- Finnish: korkeusmittari
- French: altimètre
- German: Höhenmesser , Altimeter
- Interlingua: altimetro
- Italian: altimetro
- Portuguese: altímetro
- Spanish: altímetro
- Swedish: höjdmätare
Related terms
Extensive Definition
An altimeter is an instrument used to measure the
altitude of an object
above a fixed level. The measurement of altitude is called
altimetry, which is related to the term bathymetry, the measurement
of depth underwater.
Aircraft Instrumentation
Pressure altimeter
A pressure altimeter (also called barometric altimeter) is the altimeter found in most aircraft. In it, an aneroid barometer measures the atmospheric pressure from a static port outside the aircraft. Air pressure decreases with an increase of altitude—approximately 100 millibars per 800 meters or one inch of mercury per 1000 feet near sea level.The altimeter is calibrated to show the pressure
directly as an altitude above mean sea
level, in accordance with a mathematical model defined by the
International Standard Atmosphere (ISA). Older aircraft used a
simple
aneroid barometer where the needle made less than one
revolution around the face from zero to full scale. Modern aircraft
use a "sensitive altimeter" which has a primary needle that makes
multiple revolutions, and one or more secondary needles that show
the number of revolutions, similar to a clock face. In
other words, each needle points to a different digit of the current
altitude measurement.
On a sensitive altimeter, the sea level reference
pressure can be adjusted by a setting knob. The reference pressure,
in inches of mercury in Canada and the
US
and millibars (or hectopascals)
elsewhere, is displayed in the Kollsman
Window, visible at the right side of the aircraft altimeter shown
here. This is necessary, since sea level reference atmospheric
pressure varies with temperature and the movement of pressure
systems in the atmosphere.
In aviation terminology, the
regional or local air pressure at mean sea level (MSL) is called
the QNH or
"altimeter setting", and the pressure which will calibrate the
altimeter to show the height above ground at a given airfield is called the
QFE of the field. An altimeter cannot, however, be adjusted for
variations in air temperature. Differences in temperature from the
ISA model will, therefore, cause errors in indicated
altitude.
The calibration formula for an altimeter, up to ,
can be written as:
- h = \frac
where h is the indicated altitude in feet, P is
the static pressure and P_ is the reference pressure (use same
units for both). This is derived from the barometric
formula using the scale height for the troposphere.
Radar altimeter
A radar altimeter measures altitude more directly, using the time taken for a radio signal to reflect from the surface back to the aircraft. The radar altimeter is used to measure height above ground level during landing in commercial and military aircraft. Radar altimeters are also a component of terrain avoidance warning systems, warning the pilot if the aircraft is flying too low, or if there is rising terrain ahead. Radar altimeter technology is also used in terrain-following radar allowing fighter aircraft to fly at very low altitude.Global Positioning System
Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers can also determine altitude by trilateration with four or more satellites. However, altitude determined using autonomous GPS is not precise or accurate enough to supersede the pressure altimeter for aviation use without using some method of augmentation.Other Modes of Transport
The altimeter is an instrument optional in off-road vehicles to aid in navigation. Some high-performance luxury cars which were never intended to leave paved roads, such as the Duesenberg in the 1930s, have also been equipped with an altimeter.Mountaineers
use wrist-mounted barometric altimeters when on high-altitude
expeditions, as do skydivers.
Measuring air pressure
The local atmospheric pressure or ambient
pressure is displayed in the Kollsman window of a sensitive
altimeter, when it is adjusted to read zero altitude.http://www.stolaf.edu/people/hansonr/soaring/altimetr.htm.''
Satellites
A number of satellites (see links) use advanced dual-band radar altimeters to measure height from a spacecraft. That measurement, coupled with orbital elements (possibly augmented by GPS), enables determination of the terrain. The two different wavelengths of radio waves used permit the altimeter to automatically correct for varying delays in the ionosphere.Over water, detailed satellite altitude
information has proven useful. Humps in the water indicate gravitational
concentrations, permitting a computer program to construct a map of
undersea features such as mountains. The altimeters can also
measure wave heights, wave directions, and wave spectra. This
information permits computer programs to measure the speed of ocean
currents and produce detailed maps of wind speeds and directions at
the surface, even in extremely stormy conditions.
See also
- Flight instruments
- Flight level
- seasat, TOPEX/Poseidon are satellites that deployed extremely accurate altimeters
- United Airlines Flight 389
- Jason-1, Ocean Surface Topography Mission/Jason-2 are current satellite missions that use altimeters to measure sea surface height
External links
commons Altimeteraltimeter in Arabic: مقياس الإرتفاع
altimeter in Czech: Výškoměr
altimeter in Danish: Højdemåler (luftfart)
altimeter in German: Altimeter
altimeter in Spanish: Altímetro
altimeter in Esperanto: Altomezurilo
altimeter in French: Altimètre
altimeter in Galician: Altímetro
altimeter in Korean: 고도계
altimeter in Croatian: Visinomjer
altimeter in Indonesian: Altimeter
altimeter in Italian: Altimetro
altimeter in Lithuanian: Aukščiamatis
altimeter in Hungarian: Nyomásmagasság
altimeter in Dutch: Hoogtemeter
altimeter in Japanese: 高度計
altimeter in Norwegian: Høydemåler
altimeter in Polish: Wysokościomierz
altimeter in Portuguese: Altímetro
altimeter in Russian: Альтиметр
altimeter in Slovenian: Višinomer
altimeter in Finnish: Korkeusmittari
altimeter in Turkish: Altimetre
altimeter in Ukrainian:
Альтиметр