Altitude in a sentence as a noun

747-800 burns about 2,900 gal of fuel per hour at cruise altitude and speed.

Then at perigee you burn to raise your apogee out to the altitude you want.

This turns part of your altitude into kinetic energy, so your ground speed increases by about 100-150 kph.

You then sharply pull up, gaining about 100 meters of altitude and losing some of your velocity.

"Hey, one pilot thinks we should descend, the other we should climb, better maintain altitude without telling either one about it".

The relative wind speed has increased with altitude, so your kinetic energy loss in relation to the air from pulling up is less than it would be in dead air.

> can spot a terrorist from 20k feetWhat's the altitude for detecting unarmed non-combatants?

Then it becomes a matter of managing your energy, if you want to keep altitude you are going to end stalling, and if you want to keep speed youll descend too soon and too fast.

Instead of testing controlled hovering and precision landing it'll go up to supersonic speeds and potentially up to 90km altitude.

This becomes problematic when using a GPS in a high-altitude weather balloon to determine altitude and location, which a few friends and I did a couple years ago.

And rocketry + high altitude flight remains extremely exciting and potentially more efficient than standard jetliner transport.

One merely has to refer to RFC 1149[1] to determine why this solution is obviously unacceptable:"Avian carriers can provide high delay, low throughput, and low altitude service.

So apparently the TSA says: "Each full body scan produces less than 10 microrem of emission, the equivalent to the exposure each person receives in about 2 minutes of airplane flight at altitude.

I remember a more innocent time almost three decades ago when my work involved frequent flying, such that I have been to most major airports in the United States repeatedly and have logged weeks above 30,000 feet of altitude.

They shut themselves down if they detect you are travelling around Mach 2 or above 18000 metres altitudeThe intention was for a GPS device to disable itself if it was traveling faster than 1k knots AND above 60k feet, not traveling faster than 1k knots OR above 60k feet.

Altitude definitions

noun

elevation especially above sea level or above the earth's surface; "the altitude gave her a headache"

See also: height

noun

the perpendicular distance from the base of a geometric figure to the opposite vertex (or side if parallel)

noun

angular distance above the horizon (especially of a celestial object)

See also: elevation