
Radar: turning invisible waves into information that reshaped war and peace.
Radar could detect stealthy U-boats by tracking the wake of their diesel exhaust amid distances beyond visual sight.
British radar patches secretly used birds and bats as natural calibrators to test signal fidelity over varied weather.
The Germans briefly intercepted RAF radar by exploiting the night’s humidity, creating false echoes that masked real aircraft.
Radar memory banks stored over 60,000 signal patterns, enabling rapid fingerprinting of enemy aircraft after a single sighting.

Radar: turning invisible waves into information that reshaped war and peace.
Radar could detect stealthy U-boats by tracking the wake of their diesel exhaust amid distances beyond visual sight.
British radar patches secretly used birds and bats as natural calibrators to test signal fidelity over varied weather.
The Germans briefly intercepted RAF radar by exploiting the night’s humidity, creating false echoes that masked real aircraft.
Radar memory banks stored over 60,000 signal patterns, enabling rapid fingerprinting of enemy aircraft after a single sighting.
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