Watson-Watt Proposes Radar: Difference between revisions

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On 12 February 1935 Robert Watson-Watt sent a memorandum entitled "Detection of aircraft by radio methods", which Hanbury Brown calls "the birth certificate of [[Radar|radar]]." During [[Radar during World War II|World War II]], radar played a pivotal role in the success or failure of many military missions.
On 12 February 1935 [[Robert Watson-Watt|Robert Watson-Watt]] sent a memorandum entitled "Detection of aircraft by radio methods", which Hanbury Brown calls "the birth certificate of [[Radar|radar]]." During [[Radar during World War II|World War II]], radar played a pivotal role in the success or failure of many military missions.


[[Category:Radar]]
[[Category:Radar]]

Revision as of 15:41, 20 November 2013

Robert Watson-Watt

This article is a stub. Please help expand the article by using the edit tab.

On 12 February 1935 Robert Watson-Watt sent a memorandum entitled "Detection of aircraft by radio methods", which Hanbury Brown calls "the birth certificate of radar." During World War II, radar played a pivotal role in the success or failure of many military missions.