Night Vision for Airmen

Night Vision for Airmen

Author: United States. Office of the Chief of Naval Operations

Publisher:

Published: 1944

Total Pages: 20

ISBN-13:

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You wouldn't be in naval aviation if you didn't have good eyes. But having good eyes and seeing well are as different as having a fine gun and shooting well. This is doubly true at night. Most people do not know the facts about night seeing. Many people don't even know that there is anything to learn about it. But from the moment you climb into a plane until the moment you climb out of it you depend on seeing. The more you see and the faster you see it, the healthier the climate whether you are over the North Atlantic, the Central Pacific, Tokyo-or your home field or carrier. The enemy is already learning the tricks of night seeing. To keep ahead of the enemy we must use all there is to know on the subject. You will never see as well at night as a tomcat, but you can learn to do a better job of seeing at night. Aside from the obvious fact that you can't see as much in darkness as in daylight, there are three reasons why it takes thought and training and practice to get the most out of your night eyes. 1. Your mind and your eyes are a team. To see well, you must concentrate on seeing and put effort into it. If you don't, you don't see. 2. Your eyes are so built that you have to learn to use them in a different way at night. 3. Your eyes tell you so little and familiar things look so different at night that it takes practice to recognize the things your eyes see.


Twenty-Plus Years of Night Vision Technology: Publications and Patents from the Crew System Interface Division of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio

Twenty-Plus Years of Night Vision Technology: Publications and Patents from the Crew System Interface Division of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 726

ISBN-13:

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For over twenty years, the Crew System Interface Division (HEC; www.hec.afrl.af.mil) of the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), located at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base OH, has advanced night vision technology. This technology includes investigations into visual acuity through night vision goggles (NVGs), night vision imaging system (NVIS) cockpit lighting compatibility, wide field-of-view night vision devices, NVG measurement methodologies, plus human factors and aircraft integration issues. This document is a compilation of the complete text of selected publications and reports produced by AFRL/HEC addressing these various areas of night vision technology. It also includes a listing of relevant patent abstracts and a bibliography of other Division publications related to night vision technology.