Blip, Ping, and Buzz: Making Sense of Radar and Sonar by Mark Denny (Author).
Have you ever ever puzzled how stealth planes obtain "invisibility," how sunken ships are found, or how fishermen observe faculties of fish in huge expanses of ocean? Radar and sonar echolocation-an easy matter of sending, receiving, and processing signals.
Weaving historical past with easy science, Mark Denny deftly reveals the world of radar and sonar to the curious reader, technology buff, and expert alike. He begins with an early history of the Chain Dwelling radar system used throughout World Conflict II and then gives accessible and engaging explanations of the physics that make signal processing possible. Fundamental diagrams and formulas present how electromagnetic and sound waves are transmitted, obtained, and transformed into images, permitting you to actually see in the dark.
A bit on bioacoustic echolocation, with a give attention to the superior sonar techniques of bats and whales and a dialogue of the advanced expertise of next-era airborne sign processors, opens the creativeness to fascinating potentialities for the future.
This was a very entertaining and enlightening guide to read. This goes nicely past the "a wave goes out, reflects and comes back" clarification of radar and sonar. The truth is, trying at the Wikipedia entry for Radar, you get a top level view of the radar subjects in this book. But this e book might be more enjoyable and can clarify much better what those phrases mean. You will learn a number of the language of signal processing and have it well illustrated in text and easy figures. He does sonar as well, and the fantastic MB800 sign processor seems to be a favorite. That final part could sound boring, however trust me, it isn't!
Denny makes some history, most notably of the British Chain Dwelling radar that helped win the Battle of Britain. He additionally has a nice section on digital warfare, with a history of the back and forth between the British and the Germans in World Warfare II.
If you happen to've questioned in regards to the side-scan sonar photos into Bob Ballard's stories of attempting to find ships, there is a readable description of how that works.
I will say that it'll enable you in the event you learn the technical notes at the end of the book. You won't be faced with pages and pages of algebra or a slew of acronyms. Just excellent writing.
Blip, Ping, and Buzz: Making Sense of Radar and Sonar
Mark Denny (Author)
288 pages
The Johns Hopkins University Press; 1 edition (September 12, 2007)
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