Book ID: CBB071343561

Blind Bombing: How Microwave Radar Brought the Allies to D-Day and Victory in World War II (2019)

unapi

Norman Fine (Author)


Potomac Books
Publication date: 2019
Language: English


Publication Date: 2019
Physical Details: 256

Late in 1939 Nazi Germany was poised to overrun Europe and extend Adolf Hitler’s fascist control. At the same time, however, two British physicists invented the resonant cavity magnetron. About the size of a hockey puck, it unlocked the enormous potential of radar exclusively for the Allies. Since the discovery of radar early in the twentieth century, development across most of the world had progressed only incrementally. Germany and Japan had radar as well, but in just three years, the Allies’ new radar, incorporating the top-secret cavity magnetron, turned the tide of war from doubtful to a known conclusion before the enemy even figured out how. The tactical difference between the enemy’s primitive radar and the Allies’ new radar was similar to that between a musket and a rifle. The cavity magnetron proved to be the single most influential new invention contributing to winning the war in Europe. Norman Fine tells the relatively unknown story of radar’s transformation from a technical curiosity to a previously unimaginable offensive weapon. We meet scientists and warriors critical to the story of radar and its pressure-filled development and implementation. Blind Bombing brings to light two characters who played an integral role in the story as it unfolded: one, a brilliant and opinionated scientist, the other, an easygoing twenty-one-year-old caught up in the peacetime draft. This unlikely pair and a handful of their cohorts pioneered a revolution in warfare. They formulated new offensive tactics by trying, failing, and persevering, ultimately overcoming the naysayers and obstructionists on their own side and finally the enemy.

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Reviewed By

Review Kenneth P. Werrell (2020) Review of "Blind Bombing: How Microwave Radar Brought the Allies to D-Day and Victory in World War II". Air Power History (pp. 52-53). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Brown, Louis C.
Clodfelter, Mark
Cook, Alan H.
Eldridge, Chris
Gucciardo, Dorotea
Han, Lu
Journals
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Air Power History
American Heritage of Invention and Technology
Chinese Journal for the History of Science and Technology
History and Technology
Icon: Journal of the International Committee for the History of Technology
Publishers
Oxford University Press
Cornell University Press
Institute of Physics Publishing
Sutton
University of Nebraska Press
Specialty Press
Concepts
World War II
Military technology
Radar
Technology and war; technology and the military
Development of technology; change in technology
Aircraft; airplanes
Time Periods
20th century
20th century, early
21st century
20th century, late
Places
Great Britain
United States
Soviet Union
Canada
China
France
Institutions
United States Air Force (USAF)
United States Navy
Great Britain. Defence Evaluation Research Agency
Luftwaffe (Germany)
Lockheed Aircraft Corporation
Northrop Grumman Corporation
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