American Decades
Radar Electronic Fundamentals
Reference work
By: Bureau of Ships, U.S. Navy
Date: June 1944
Source: Bureau of Ships, U.S. Navy. Radar Electronic Fundamentals. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1944, 1–4.
Introduction
The use of the airplane during World War I (1914–1918) led military planners to seek a way of detecting planes before they could attack troops and materiel. In 1930 Lawrence Hyland, a staff officer at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, discovered that radio signals transmitted from the ground reflected back from airplanes to the ground, allowing troops to detect them while they were still miles away.
Another officer at the National Research Laboratory, Leo Young, modified Hyland's discovery by producing short bursts of radio waves at fixed intervals. Young conceived of high frequency radio waves clustered in short bursts and sweeping the sky in all...
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1940's Science and Technology Primary Sources
- Linus Pauling's Research Notebooks
- Atanasoff/Mauchly Correspondence, 1941
- Heredity and Environment
- "Feasibility of a Chain Reaction"
- ENIAC Progress Report
- Radar Electronic Fundamentals
- "World's Greatest Mathematical Calculator"
- "As We May Think"
- Race: Science and Politics
- "Three-Electrode Circuit Element Utilizing Semiconductive Materials"
- Cybernetics
- "The General and Logical Theory of Automata"
- Draft Letter from Niels Bohr to Werner Heisenberg, ca. 1957
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
