- Above ground level
In
aviation andatmospheric sciences , analtitude is said to be above ground level (AGL) when it is measured with respect to the underlying ground surface. This is as opposed toabove mean sea level (AMSL), or inbroadcast engineering ,height above average terrain (HAAT). In other words, these expressions (AGL, AMSL, or HAAT) indicate where the "zero level" or "reference altitude" is located.Aviation
A pilot flying a plane under
instrument flight rules (typically under poorvisibility conditions) must rely on itsaltimeter to decide when to deploy the aircraftundercarriage and prepare for landing. Therefore the pilot needs reliable information on thealtitude of the plane with respect to the air strip. The altimeter, which is normally abarometer calibrated in units of distance instead ofatmospheric pressure , must therefore be set in such a way as to indicate the altitude of the craft above ground. This is done by communicating with the control tower of the airport (to get the current surface pressure) and setting the altimeter so as to report a null altitude AGL on the ground of that airport. Confusing AGL with AMSL, or improperly calibration of the altimeter may result incontrolled flight into terrain , a crash under pilot control.Atmospheric sciences
In
weather andclimate studies, measurements or simulations often need to refer to a specific height or altitude, which is naturally AGL. However, the values of geophysical variables measured in various places on the natural (ground) surface may not be easily compared in hilly or mountainous terrain, because part of the observed variability is due to changes in the altitude of the surface. For this reason, variables such as pressure or temperature are sometimes 'reduced' to mean sea level.In general circulation models and
global climate model s, the state and properties of theatmosphere are specified or computed at a number of discrete locations and heights. When thetopography of thecontinent s is explicitly represented, the altitudes of these locations are set above the simulated ground level. This is often implemented using the so-calledsigma coordinate system, which is the ratio of the pressure at a location (latitude, longitude, altitude) divided by the pressure at the nadir of that location on ground surface (same latitude, same longitude, altitude AGL =0).Broadcasting
In broadcasting, AGL has relatively little direct bearing on the
broadcast range of a station. Rather, it is HAAT (the height above the "surrounding" area) which is used to determine how far abroadcast station (or any other sort ofVHF or higherradio-frequency transmission) will travel.More important is the height of the
radio tower used to support theradio antenna . In this case, AGL is the only important measurement for aviation authorities, which require that some tall towers have properpainting andlighting to avoid collisions.External links
* [http://www.airport-int.com/glossary/agl-above-ground-level AGL in aviation]
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