Normal height
Normal heights is a type of height above sea level introduced by Mikhail Molodenskii. The normal height of a point is computed from geopotential numbers by dividing the point's geopotential number (i.e. its geopotential difference with that of sea level), by the average, normal gravity computed along the plumbline of the point. (More precisely, along the ellipsoidal normal, averaging over the height range from 0 — the ellipsoid — to ; the procedure is thus recursive.)
Normal heights are thus dependent upon the reference ellipsoid chosen. The Soviet Union and many other Eastern European countries have chosen a height system based on normal heights, determined by geodetic precise levelling. Normal gravity values are easy to compute and "hypothesis-free", i.e., one does not have to know, as one would for computing orthometric heights, the density of the Earth's crust around the plumbline.
The reference surface that normal heights are measured from is called the quasi-geoid, a representation of "mean sea level" similar to the geoid and close to it, but lacking the physical interpretation of an equipotential surface.
Alternatives include orthometric heights and dynamic heights.