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#11
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In article mpcehand writes:
On Jan 21, 6:16=A0pm, John Cochrane wrote: On Jan 21, 2:04=A0pm, bildan wrote: http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/on...lephoto-lens-s... Yes! It's always struck me that a little signal processing on the shimmer you see in telephoto lenses might work to show thermals. A bit of signal processing would also show birds, gliders, cornstalks, cu development, and other stuff that the naked eye tends to miss. Darn day job... John Cochrane Hmmm. I had a different idea of how a remote thermal finder might be made, but no time to work on it, as it would take a bunch of effort to learn the details of actual implementation to try it. The idea of a remote thermal finder is already being worked on by a very distinguished scientist who lives and fly's @ the best soaring center on the planet earth. My money is on him. Why would he be the one to do it? If the soaring is so good there, he probably has no trouble finding lift. My money would be on someone who flys in a marginal area, who needs a thermal finder. Alan |
#12
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On Jan 23, 12:00*am, (Alan) wrote:
In article mpcehand writes: On Jan 21, 6:16=A0pm, John Cochrane wrote: On Jan 21, 2:04=A0pm, bildan wrote: http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/on...lephoto-lens-s.... Yes! It's always struck me that a little signal processing on the shimmer you see in telephoto lenses might work to show thermals. A bit of signal processing would also show birds, gliders, cornstalks, cu development, and other stuff that the naked eye tends to miss. Darn day job... John Cochrane * Hmmm. *I had a different idea of how a remote thermal finder might be made, but no time to work on it, as it would take a bunch of effort to learn the details of actual implementation to try it. The idea of a remote thermal finder is already being worked on by a very distinguished scientist who lives and fly's @ the best soaring center on the planet earth. My money is on him. * Why would he be the one to do it? *If the soaring is so good there, he probably has no trouble finding lift. * My money would be on someone who flys in a marginal area, who needs a thermal finder. * * * * Alan My guess (possibly wrong) is the biggest value of a remote thermal detector, at least at first, will be sort of a short-range "thermal centering aid". Knowing there is strong core 300 meters away is "highly actionable" data. Cruising along while searching a 1 km wide path will eliminate passing close by a strong thermal without knowing about it. Knowing there is a thermal 10 km away is interesting but it's a good bet it will dissipate before you can get there and chasing after it may not be the best strategy. |
#13
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* * * * Alan
My guess (possibly wrong) is the biggest value of a remote thermal detector, at least at first, will be sort of a short-range "thermal centering aid". *Knowing there is strong core 300 meters away is "highly actionable" data. * Cruising along while searching a 1 km wide path will eliminate passing close by a strong thermal without knowing about it. *Knowing there is a thermal 10 km away is interesting but it's a good bet it will dissipate before you can get there and chasing after it may not be the best strategy. The next biggest value will be that even 1 km range thermal detectors will eliminate the start gate roulette, gaggling and leeching in contests. Why go through all that when you can reliably find the thermals on your own? That is, after the first guy to bring one destroys the competition at the world championships! .. In addition to camera signal processing to see light refraction, same to see birds/gliders, lidar to see dust concentration, doppler lidar to see dust movements, active or passive (listen to weather/FAA) radar to see bugs, birds, and gliders, infrared to see moisture concentration, infra red to see heat, would all work. Most of these are used now in ground-based or large aircraft form for various other purposes -- doppler lidar to study storms pollution plumes and wind profilers, bird/bug radar to study former, FLIR in the military, They need only a bit of miniaturization. Lots of winter projects for the technically inclined! More speculation on thermal detectors: http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john..._detectors.mht http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john...s/barnaby.html John Cochrane |
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