LORAN - translation to french
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LORAN - translation to french

LONG RANGE NAVIGATION SYSTEM
LORAN-C transmitter Soustons; LORAN-C transmitter Upolo Point; LORAN-C transmitter Boise; LORAN-C transmitter Baudette; LORAN-C transmitter Raymondville; LORAN-C transmitter Loop Head; LORAN-C transmitter Afif; LORAN-C transmitter Al Khamasin; LORAN-C transmitter Al Muwassam; LORAN-C transmitter Ash Shayk; LORAN-C transmitter Niijima; LORAN-C transmitter Chongzuo; LORAN-C transmitter Raoping; LORAN-C transmitter Rongcheng; LORAN-C transmitter Xuancheng; LORAN-C transmitter Sellia Marina; Loomis radio navigation; LORAN-C transmitter Las Cruces; LORAN-C transmitter Kwang Ju; LORAN-C transmitter Pohang; LORAN-C transmitter Tokachibuto; LORAN-C transmitter Balasore; LORAN-C transmitter Diamond Harbor; LORAN-C transmitter Dhrangadhra; LORAN-C transmitter Veraval; LORAN-C transmitter Billamora; Barrigada LORAN-C transmitter; Vaerlandet LORAN-C transmitter; LORAN-C transmitter; Long range aid to navigation; LOng RAnge Navigation; LORAN-A; Long-range navigation; LORAN C; Loran-A; Long Range Navigation; Long-Range Aid to Navigation
  • A single leg of a LORAN system lies along the "baseline" from stations A to B. At any point between these stations, a receiver will measure a difference in timing of the two pulses. This same delay will occur in many other locations along a hyperbolic curve. A navigational chart showing a sample of these curves produces a graph like this image.
  • The signal from a single LORAN transmitter will be received several times from several directions. This image shows the weak groundwave arriving first, then signals after one and two hops off the ionosphere's E layer, and finally one and two hops off the F layer. Operator skill was needed to tell these apart.
  • The AN/APN-4 was an airborne LORAN receiver used into the 1960s. It was built in two parts to match the UK's Gee system, and could be swapped with Gee in a few minutes.
  • R-65/APN-9 in a B-17G aircraft
  • AN/APN-4 LORAN in RCAF Canso (PBY) aircraft.
  • LORAN tower station on Sand Island in [[Johnston Atoll]], 1963

LORAN         
loran, long-range navigational device which uses radio waves
decca         
n. Decca, a navigation system using principles similar to Loran C

Definition

Loran
['l?:ran, 'l?-]
¦ noun a system of long-distance navigation in which position is determined from the intervals between signal pulses received from widely spaced radio transmitters.
Origin
1940s: from lo(ng-)ra(nge) n(avigation).

Wikipedia

LORAN

LORAN, short for long range navigation, was a hyperbolic radio navigation system developed in the United States during World War II. It was similar to the UK's Gee system but operated at lower frequencies in order to provide an improved range up to 1,500 miles (2,400 km) with an accuracy of tens of miles. It was first used for ship convoys crossing the Atlantic Ocean, and then by long-range patrol aircraft, but found its main use on the ships and aircraft operating in the Pacific theater during World War II.

LORAN, in its original form, was an expensive system to implement, requiring a cathode ray tube (CRT) display. This limited use to the military and large commercial users. Automated receivers became available in the 1950s, but the same improved electronics also opened the possibility of new systems with higher accuracy. The U.S. Navy began development of Loran-B, which offered accuracy on the order of a few tens of feet, but ran into significant technical problems. The U.S. Air Force worked on a different concept, Cyclan, which the Navy took over as Loran-C, which offered longer range than LORAN and accuracy of hundreds of feet. The U.S. Coast Guard took over operations of both systems in 1958.

In spite of the dramatically improved performance of Loran-C, LORAN, now known as Loran-A (or "Standard LORAN"), would become much more popular during this period. This was due largely to the large numbers of surplus Loran-A units released from the Navy as ships and aircraft replaced their sets with Loran-C. The widespread introduction of inexpensive microelectronics during the 1960s caused Loran-C receivers to drop in price dramatically, and Loran-A use began to rapidly decline. Loran-A was dismantled starting in the 1970s; it remained active in North America until 1980 and the rest of the world until 1985. A Japanese chain remained on the air until 9 May 1997, and a Chinese chain was still listed as active as of 2000.

Loran-A used two frequency bands, at 1.85 and 1.95 MHz. These same frequencies were used by radio amateurs, in the amateur radio 160-meter band, and amateur operators were under strict rules to operate at reduced power levels to avoid interference; depending on their location and distance to the shore, U.S. operators were limited to maximums of 200 to 500 watts during the day and 50 to 200 watts at night.