elektronik yer tesbit sistemi

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Türkçe - İngilizce
loran
Long range aid to navigation Operates off of (3) land based radio towers to triangulate location
abbreviation of long-range navigation A land-based system of radio navigation in common use over the continental United States and in its coastal waters. It was developed during World War II for the U.S. military. A civilian version, Loran-C, was developed in the 1950s. Loran-C can be used to determine position within about 30 ft (10 m) by comparing signals from multiple stations. Loran-like systems operate in many coastal waters around the world. However, the availability of the global positioning system (GPS), with a typical accuracy of 3 ft (1 m), has begun to relegate loran to backup status
Long Range Aid to Navigation
– A long-range navigational system in which position is determined by an analysis involving the time intervals between pulsed radio signals from two or more pairs of ground stations of known position; lo(ng)ra(nge)n(avigation)
Long-Range Navigation
A navigational system similar to GPS except based on ground transmitters, LORAN is relatively obsolete
Long Range Navigation, a system of long range navigation whereby latitude and longitude are determined from the time displacement of radio signals from two or more fixed transmitters
  Acronym for long-range radio navigation   A long-range radio navigation position-fixing system consisting of an array of fixed stations that transmit precisely synchronized signals to mobile receivers Note: A loran receiver measures differences in the times of arrival of the signals from the various stations A fixed difference in the time of arrival of the signals from any two stations will define a hyperbolic arc on which the receiver must lie Three or more stations are needed to remove ambiguities in the position of the receiver   Synonyms long-range aid to navigation system, long-range radio aid to navigation system
{i} long-range navigational device which uses radio waves
An electronic instrument using radio waves from various stations to find one's position The LORAN system is being replaced by the GPS system and will be obsolete in a few years Many LORAN stations have already stopped providing service
elektronik yer tesbit sistemi