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#11
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Sriram Narayan wrote:
That still wouldn't help since the pressure change for a 1000ft change in altitude at 18k would be smaller than at sea level. It would have to have some non-linear spring compensation as a function of absolute pressure. Yes but the non-linearity is very weak. I coded up the formula for the US standard atmosphere (described below) and plotted it. See http://www.burningserver.net/rosinsk...atmosphere.jpg Perhaps the non-linearity is so weak that altimeters neglect it? I don't know. The formula for US standard atmosphere can be derived from the ideal gas approximation (p = rho*R*T) and the hydrostatic approximation (dp/dz = -rho*g). The final equation is: z = T0/gamma * (1 - (p/p0)**(R*gamma/g))) where R=287, T0 = 288K, p0 = 1013.25 mb = 29.92 in, gamma = 6.5 deg/km, g = 9.8. The formula assumes that temperature decreases linearly with altitude, an assumption which becomes invalid above the tropopause. The equation and its derivation can be found in Wallace & Hobbs, "Atmospheric Science", pg. 60-61. Jim Rosinski |
#12
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Didn't see that, thanks for pointing it out.
At least that explains the note on my altimeter saying "certified to 20000' " which I hadn't understood before. I wonder how altimeters for airliners work, given the change that happens at 36152' - or indeed the U2 altimeter. Must be some interesting stuff inside. John Peter wrote: jharper aaatttt cisco dddooottt com wrote: Dean Wilkinson wrote: Visit this website and it will answer your questions about the relationship between pressure, temperature and altitude... altimeters are designed to take the non-linearity into account... http://www.lerc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/atmosi.html Nice site, thanks. But presumably there is some standard atmospheric model that altimeters use? After all nobody actually cares whether FL300 is really 30000' feet above MSL, as long as everyone flying there is at the same altitude and, more importantly, not at somebody else's FL290 or FL310. Yes, there is a standard model and if you click on the first link on the cited page you get to: http://www.lerc.nasa.gov/WWW/K-12/airplane/atmos.html which gives the equations describing that standard model. Which implies that there must be some standard mechanical way of making the translation? There's a mathematically defined correspondence between altitude and pressure under the standard atmosphere assumption. But I doubt if the specific mechanical means of achieving that correspondence is specified anywhere. As long as the manufacturer makes an instrument that is shown to give the right correspondence to within a specified accuracy why should it matter exactly how they do it? I'll ask next time I visit my avionics shop, but considering what each visit costs I quite hope this won't be for a while. |
#13
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![]() "Sriram Narayan" wrote in message news:1105397045.6c0b9af7d0985bd99dd3e30aa7ae44ee@t eranews... That still wouldn't help since the pressure change for a 1000ft change in altitude at 18k would be smaller than at sea level. It would have to have some non-linear spring compensation as a function of absolute pressure. The USA is just now getting into the RVSM rules which allow vertical separation of 1000 feet. Used to be 2000' minimum for all of these reasons.... |
#14
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On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 18:09:48 -0800, "jharper aaatttt cisco dddooottt
com" "jharper aaatttt cisco dddooottt com" wrote: snip I wonder how altimeters for airliners work, given the change that happens at 36152' - or indeed the U2 altimeter. Must be some interesting stuff inside. http://www.rockwellcollins.com/ecat/...html?smenu=109 http://www.cas.honeywell.com/ats/products/airdata.cfm Typically the DADC's are corrected for known issues/errors in the pitot/static system of the specific type aircraft it is installed in, as well as the "change"s you've noted. TC |
#15
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jharper aaatttt cisco dddooottt com opined
At sea level, the change in atmospheric pressure with altitude is close to 1"Hg/1000'. Logically, this would mean that the air pressure would drop to zero somewhere not much above 30000'. It doesn't, because as the density drops the variation with altitude also changes. Which brings to mind the question, how does an altimeter deal with this? As far as I know, it's just a simple aneroid barometer with a bunch of linkages and gears to turn its expansion into pointer movement. My altimeter is marked "accurate to 20000' ". Is this why? Do altimeters for higher altitudes have some kind of clever mechanism to deal with the non-linearity of pressure at higher altitudes. I asked my acro instructor (10K+ hrs, airforce instructor pilot, ex U2 pilot so should know a thing or two about high altitudes). He explained the non-linearity of pressure to me but was stumped on how this translates to the altimeter mechanism. A couple of good approximations are A = 25,000 * ln(30/25000) and P = 30 * exp(-A/25000) For an altimeter, use gears with a varying radius. -ash Cthulhu in 2005! Why wait for nature? |
#16
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![]() "jim rosinski" wrote in message oups.com... Sriram Narayan wrote: That still wouldn't help since the pressure change for a 1000ft change in altitude at 18k would be smaller than at sea level. It would have to have some non-linear spring compensation as a function of absolute pressure. Yes but the non-linearity is very weak. I coded up the formula for the US standard atmosphere (described below) and plotted it. See http://www.burningserver.net/rosinsk...atmosphere.jpg Perhaps the non-linearity is so weak that altimeters neglect it? I don't know. The formula for US standard atmosphere can be derived from the ideal gas approximation (p = rho*R*T) and the hydrostatic approximation (dp/dz = -rho*g). The final equation is: z = T0/gamma * (1 - (p/p0)**(R*gamma/g))) where R=287, T0 = 288K, p0 = 1013.25 mb = 29.92 in, gamma = 6.5 deg/km, g = 9.8. The formula assumes that temperature decreases linearly with altitude, an assumption which becomes invalid above the tropopause. The equation and its derivation can be found in Wallace & Hobbs, "Atmospheric Science", pg. 60-61. Jim Rosinski It doesn't look that linear to me. I found a website with a similar graph and it appears that at sea level and at 10000ft the slope of the curve is at least 2x different. Your curve is quite a bit more linear (maybe 20% increase in slope at 10k). There must some sort of mechanical compensation involved otherwise altimeters would be off quite a bit even at 10k (even with your curve). Isn't it something like 75ft accuracy requirement for altimeters? http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de/enid/16h.html |
#17
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![]() "jim rosinski" wrote in message oups.com... Sriram Narayan wrote: That still wouldn't help since the pressure change for a 1000ft change in altitude at 18k would be smaller than at sea level. It would have to have some non-linear spring compensation as a function of absolute pressure. Yes but the non-linearity is very weak. I coded up the formula for the US standard atmosphere (described below) and plotted it. See http://www.burningserver.net/rosinsk...atmosphere.jpg Perhaps the non-linearity is so weak that altimeters neglect it? I don't know. The formula for US standard atmosphere can be derived from the ideal gas approximation (p = rho*R*T) and the hydrostatic approximation (dp/dz = -rho*g). The final equation is: z = T0/gamma * (1 - (p/p0)**(R*gamma/g))) where R=287, T0 = 288K, p0 = 1013.25 mb = 29.92 in, gamma = 6.5 deg/km, g = 9.8. The formula assumes that temperature decreases linearly with altitude, an assumption which becomes invalid above the tropopause. The equation and its derivation can be found in Wallace & Hobbs, "Atmospheric Science", pg. 60-61. Jim Rosinski It doesn't look that linear to me. I found a website with a similar graph and it appears that at sea level and at 10000ft the slope of the curve is at least 2x different. Your curve is quite a bit more linear (maybe 20% increase in slope at 10k). There must some sort of mechanical compensation involved otherwise altimeters would be off quite a bit even at 10k (even with your curve). Isn't it something like 75ft accuracy requirement for altimeters? http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de/enid/16h.html |
#18
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![]() "jim rosinski" wrote in message oups.com... Sriram Narayan wrote: That still wouldn't help since the pressure change for a 1000ft change in altitude at 18k would be smaller than at sea level. It would have to have some non-linear spring compensation as a function of absolute pressure. Yes but the non-linearity is very weak. I coded up the formula for the US standard atmosphere (described below) and plotted it. See http://www.burningserver.net/rosinsk...atmosphere.jpg Perhaps the non-linearity is so weak that altimeters neglect it? I don't know. The formula for US standard atmosphere can be derived from the ideal gas approximation (p = rho*R*T) and the hydrostatic approximation (dp/dz = -rho*g). The final equation is: z = T0/gamma * (1 - (p/p0)**(R*gamma/g))) where R=287, T0 = 288K, p0 = 1013.25 mb = 29.92 in, gamma = 6.5 deg/km, g = 9.8. The formula assumes that temperature decreases linearly with altitude, an assumption which becomes invalid above the tropopause. The equation and its derivation can be found in Wallace & Hobbs, "Atmospheric Science", pg. 60-61. Jim Rosinski It doesn't look that linear to me. I found a website with a similar graph and it appears that at sea level and at 10000ft the slope of the curve is at least 2x different. Your curve is quite a bit more linear (maybe 20% increase in slope at 10k). There must some sort of mechanical compensation involved otherwise altimeters would be off quite a bit even at 10k (even with your curve). Isn't it something like 75ft accuracy requirement for altimeters? http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de/enid/16h.html |
#19
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![]() "Ash Wyllie" wrote in message ... jharper aaatttt cisco dddooottt com opined At sea level, the change in atmospheric pressure with altitude is close to 1"Hg/1000'. Logically, this would mean that the air pressure would drop to zero somewhere not much above 30000'. It doesn't, because as the density drops the variation with altitude also changes. Which brings to mind the question, how does an altimeter deal with this? As far as I know, it's just a simple aneroid barometer with a bunch of linkages and gears to turn its expansion into pointer movement. My altimeter is marked "accurate to 20000' ". Is this why? Do altimeters for higher altitudes have some kind of clever mechanism to deal with the non-linearity of pressure at higher altitudes. I asked my acro instructor (10K+ hrs, airforce instructor pilot, ex U2 pilot so should know a thing or two about high altitudes). He explained the non-linearity of pressure to me but was stumped on how this translates to the altimeter mechanism. A couple of good approximations are A = 25,000 * ln(30/25000) and P = 30 * exp(-A/25000) For an altimeter, use gears with a varying radius. Looks good! It is within 2.5% of the actual standard pressure up to 12000 ft. If you change the 25000 to 26000 in the 2nd formula it is within 1% for the same range. The trick is to build a gear that conforms to this. |
#20
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Sriram Narayan opined
"Ash Wyllie" wrote in message ... jharper aaatttt cisco dddooottt com opined At sea level, the change in atmospheric pressure with altitude is close to 1"Hg/1000'. Logically, this would mean that the air pressure would drop to zero somewhere not much above 30000'. It doesn't, because as the density drops the variation with altitude also changes. Which brings to mind the question, how does an altimeter deal with this? As far as I know, it's just a simple aneroid barometer with a bunch of linkages and gears to turn its expansion into pointer movement. My altimeter is marked "accurate to 20000' ". Is this why? Do altimeters for higher altitudes have some kind of clever mechanism to deal with the non-linearity of pressure at higher altitudes. I asked my acro instructor (10K+ hrs, airforce instructor pilot, ex U2 pilot so should know a thing or two about high altitudes). He explained the non-linearity of pressure to me but was stumped on how this translates to the altimeter mechanism. A couple of good approximations are A = 25,000 * ln(30/25000) and P = 30 * exp(-A/25000) For an altimeter, use gears with a varying radius. Looks good! It is within 2.5% of the actual standard pressure up to 12000 ft. If you change the 25000 to 26000 in the 2nd formula it is within 1% for the same range. The trick is to build a gear that conforms to this. Oops, a typo... A = 25,000 * ln(30/P) -ash Cthulhu in 2005! Why wait for nature? |
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