Object Details
- Description
- This object is part of a Vector Airborne Magnetometer. For other pieces of this instrument, see records 1981.0687.01-.13.
- A Vector Airborne Magnetometer measures the three components of the earth's magnetic field, but orients them so as to null out two of them, thus putting the third component in the direction of the magnetic field. This type of instrument served for 25 years as the heart of Project MAGNET, an airborne magnetic survey of ocean areas that began operation in April 1953 under the command of the Naval Hydrographic Office. Project MAGNET continues to this day, though with other sorts of detectors. The Naval Oceanographic Office transferred this example to the Smithsonian in 1979. An inscription reads "U.S. NAVY HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE VAM-2A3."
- Eric Schonstedt and Henry Irons developed the design while working at the Naval Ordnance Laboratory. It is a refinement of the Magnetic Airborne Detector that the Naval Ordnance Laboratory and Bell Telephone Laboratories developed during World War II, in order to locate submerged submarines.
- Ref: E. O. Schonstedt and H. R. Irons, "Airborne Magnetometer for Measuring the Earth's Magnetic Vector,"Science 110 (1949): 377-378.
- E. O. Schonstedt and H. R. Irons, "Airborne Magnetometer for Determining All Magnetic Components," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union 34 (1953): 363-378.
- E. O. Schonstedt and H. R. Irons, "NOL Vector Airborne Magnetometer Type 2A," Transactions of the American Geophysical Union 36 (1955): 25-41.
- Magnetic Airborne Detector Programs. Summary Technical Report. Division 6, National Research and Development Committee vol. 6 (1946).
- William Anspacher, et. al., The Legacy of the White Oak Laboratory (Dahlgren, Va., 2000), chapter 10.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
- maker
- Schonstedt Instrument Company
- Measurements
- overall: 95 cm x 30.5 cm x 30.5 cm; 37 13/32 in x 12 in x 12 in
- Object Name
- Orienter Mechanism, Vector Airborne Magnetometer
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