Automatic Identification System/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz (New page: {{subpages}} ==Parent topics== {{r|International Maritime Organization}} {{r|Maritime safety}} {{r|Navigation}} {{r|Safety of Life at Sea}} ==Subtopics== {{r|Vessel Traffic Services}}...) |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
{{r|Transponder}} | {{r|Transponder}} | ||
{{r|Vessel monitoring system}} | {{r|Vessel monitoring system}} | ||
==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
{{r|Clandestine human-source intelligence}} | |||
{{r|Frequency agility}} | |||
{{r|Intelligence on the Korean War}} |
Latest revision as of 06:00, 15 July 2024
- See also changes related to Automatic Identification System, or pages that link to Automatic Identification System or to this page or whose text contains "Automatic Identification System".
Parent topics
- International Maritime Organization [r]: The United Nations agency responsible for avoiding pollution from ships, and implementing the Safety of Life at Sea convention [e]
- Maritime safety [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Navigation [r]: Techniques for determining one's own position, a feasible course to be taken to a desired new position, and journeying on that course [e]
- Safety of Life at Sea [r]: International convention defining safety requirements for ships [e]
Subtopics
- Global Maritime Distress and Safety System [r]: Mandated by the Safety of Life at Sea convention of the International Maritime Organization system of digital radio and other systems for ships to receive alerts and signal search and rescue organizations when they are in distress. [e]
- Global Navigation Satellite System [r]: A system which allows small electronic devices to determine their location (Longitude, Latitude, and Altitude) as well as time with an accuracy of up to a few centimetres using time signals transmitted along a line of sight by radio from satellites. [e]
- Mobile ad hoc networking [r]: A family of mobile computing techniques in which not only the hosts move, sometimes at supersonic speed, but the routers and other devices organizing them into networks also move [e]
- Radar [r]: Acronym for "radio detection and ranging"; a system used to locate a distant object by transmission of radio waves and reception of their reflection. [e]
- Radio [r]: Transmission and reception of information, which can be voice, data or imagery over electromagnetic radiation in free space (i.e., wireless). The information is modulated onto a carrier wave [e]
- Search and rescue [r]: The location of those in distress from natural, accidental, or hostile causes; on-scene medical stabilization and extrication; evacuation to treatment or other safe facilities [e]
- Search and rescue transponder [r]: A device used by personnel in need of rescue, which assists in the final part of the search by interacting with search radar and guiding the rescuers to the victim [e]
- Transponder [r]: A device, used in navigation, air traffic control, Safety of Life at Sea, and military operations (e.g., Identification-friend-or-foe which, when interrogated by an appropriate radio or radar signal, replies with its identification and other relevant navigation data [e]
- Vessel monitoring system [r]: System used in commercial fishing to allow environmental and fisheries regulatory organizations to monitor, minimally, the position, time at a position, and course and speed of fishing vessels. [e]
- Clandestine human-source intelligence [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Frequency agility [r]: The capability of a set of electromagnetic receivers and transmitters to change, rapidly, their operating frequencies, possibly under the control of pseudo-random, network-synchronized frequency selection software [e]
- Intelligence on the Korean War [r]: The collection and analysis, primarily by the United States with South Korean help, of information that predicted the 1950 invasion of South Korea, and the plans and capabilities of the enemy once the war had started [e]