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V — The Sea Surface and Doppler

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

Extract

For the efficient use of doppler techniques it is necessary that the beam of short radio waves, emitted from the aircraft shall be reflected from the roughness of the surface or from a plane surface at right angles to the incident beam. Over land there are plenty of roughnesses from which the beam is always thrown back, but over smooth sea there would seem to be no surface feature which can reflect the beam. It therefore is of interest to know the effect of surface winds in producing waves and ripples with various slopes and secondly the frequency with which light winds occur in various parts of the world.

Type
Doppler Navigation
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1958

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References

REFERENCES

1Cox, Charles, Munk, Walter, (1954). Measurement of the roughness of the sea surface from photographs of the Sun's glitter. This J. Opt. Soc. Amer., 44, 838.Google Scholar
2Cox, C. and Munk, W. (1954). Statistics of the sea surface derived from Sun glitter, J. Mar. Research, 13, 198.Google Scholar
3Cox, C. and Munk, W. (1955). Some problems in optical oceanography, J. Mar. Research, 14, 63.Google Scholar