Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/AN/APQ-13> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 20 of
20
with 100 items per page.
- APQ-13 abstract "The AN/APQ-13 radar was a ground scanning radar developed by Bell Laboratories, Western Electric, and MIT as an improved model of the airborne H2X radar, itself developed from the first ground scanning radar, the British H2S radar. It was used on B-29s during World War II in the Pacific theater for high altitude area bombing, search and navigation. Computation for bombing could be performed by an impact predictor. A range unit permitted a high degree of accuracy in locating beacons. The radome was carried on the aircraft belly between the bomb bays and was partially retractable on early models. The radar operated at a frequency of 9375 ± 45 megahertz and used a superheterodyne receiver.".
- APQ-13 wikiPageID "8018240".
- APQ-13 wikiPageRevisionID "587042327".
- APQ-13 hasPhotoCollection APQ-13.
- APQ-13 subject Category:Aircraft_radars.
- APQ-13 subject Category:Boeing_B-29_Superfortress.
- APQ-13 subject Category:Equipment_of_the_United_States_Air_Force.
- APQ-13 subject Category:Military_radars_of_the_United_States.
- APQ-13 subject Category:Weather_radars.
- APQ-13 subject Category:World_War_II_radars.
- APQ-13 comment "The AN/APQ-13 radar was a ground scanning radar developed by Bell Laboratories, Western Electric, and MIT as an improved model of the airborne H2X radar, itself developed from the first ground scanning radar, the British H2S radar. It was used on B-29s during World War II in the Pacific theater for high altitude area bombing, search and navigation. Computation for bombing could be performed by an impact predictor. A range unit permitted a high degree of accuracy in locating beacons.".
- APQ-13 label "AN/APQ-13".
- APQ-13 label "Radar AN/APQ-13".
- APQ-13 sameAs APQ-13.
- APQ-13 sameAs APQ-13.
- APQ-13 sameAs m.026nqgv.
- APQ-13 sameAs Q291082.
- APQ-13 sameAs Q291082.
- APQ-13 wasDerivedFrom APQ-13?oldid=587042327.
- APQ-13 isPrimaryTopicOf APQ-13.