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SONAR and RADAR
Sound
Navigation Ranging, or SONAR,
is a type of remote
sensing. It is used to gather facts about things that are far
away or cannot be seen clearly. SONAR involves making sounds and
listening to the way they bounce off objects. The echoes provide
very useful information about the objects. For example, bats use
a special kind of SONAR called echolocation to "see" where
they are flying, avoid danger, and catch insects.
Scientists
use SONAR to "look" at the ocean floor. They send out sound waves
from a ship floating on the ocean surface. The sound waves bounce
off the ocean floor. Scientists listen to the echoes. The sounds
of the echoes tell the scientists the distance between the ship
and the ocean floor. By mapping these distances, the scientists
can create pictures of the mountains and valleys on the ocean floor.
Radio
Detection And Ranging, or RADAR,
is another type of remote sensing. It is a lot like SONAR. It is
also used to gather facts about things that are far away or cannot
be seen clearly. The difference is that RADAR does not use sound
waves to remotely sense objects. Instead, RADAR uses electromagnetic
waves. The echoes of the electromagnetic waves tell us about objects.
You may have even seen a RADAR map on television. Meteorologists
use RADAR data to predict weather.
Air traffic controllers use RADAR to track airplanes. The image to
the left is a NEXRAD image of Hurricane Fran off the east coast
of the U.S. on September 5, 1996.
Image courtesy of the Weather Services International Corp. (WSI)
and NASA though the Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment Continental-Scale
International Project (GCIP).
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