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1916
Radio Becomes an Aid to Navigation
Sailors and
aviators owe a lot to the Institute, which during and after World
War I developed several radio technologies that made navigation
much safer.
Among the innovations
was a radio direction finder (RDF), a special antenna that determined
the direction of radio transmissions. The original RDF was made
by an Italian team, but NIST researchers patented an improved design,
built in 1916. It served as a prototype for the U.S. Navy and was
used widely to pinpoint the positions of enemy forces during the
war. By the mid-1920s, many civilian vessels were outfitted with
the radio compass, as it came to be known. The photograph
at right shows a radio compass and amplifier receiving signals from
ships at sea.
In another
application of the coil antenna, the Institute disproved the then-common
notion that radio communication was impossible under water. In 1917,
NIST placed an RDF under water and received signals clearly; it
then built a simple but effective radio apparatus for submarines.
The Institutes
greatest contribution to navigation was probably the use of radio
technology to make the first visual type radio beacon
for an instrument landing system, which enables an air crew to locate
and land on a runway in poor visibility. Indicators on the aircraft
instrument panel recorded the signals from strategically placed
radio transmitters, enabling the pilot to know the planes
approximate position in three dimensions at all times. The first
blind landing relying entirely on radio guidance was
made in 1931 in College Park, Md. The principles of this design
provide the basis for todays air traffic control systems worldwide.
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Date created:
11/2/00
Last updated: 11/8/00
Contact: inquries@nist.gov
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