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Some Aspects of Doppler Track Computer Navigation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

Extract

The doppler track computer is a navigation device which accepts inputs of ground-speed and track from a doppler radar, and computes and displays miles to go and miles transverse to a selected track. Several types are available on the market.

The heading input to the doppler may be from a magnetically slaved gyro or from a free gyro corrected for Earth rate. Thus, either magnetic tracks or gyro tracks are fed to the computer. Also, navigation may be carried out with reference to airways, mercator, conformal conic, oblique mercator, or polar stereographic charts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1960

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References

REFERENCES

1Houghton, P. A. (1958). The future development of doppler navigation. This Journal, 11, 130.Google Scholar
2Houghton, P. A., and Lewis, J. H. R. (1960). The role of the computer in automatic navigation. This Journal, 13, 88.Google Scholar
3Fraser, D. O. (1960). Doppler and civil aviation. This Journal, 11, 138.Google Scholar
4Pedersen, E. S. (1960). Self-contained Polar navigation. This Journal, 13, 76.Google Scholar