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Navigation and Radio

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

Extract

The use of radio as an aid to navigation is a matter for continual discussion within the Royal Institute of Navigation, and it is the subject of fresh papers in almost every issue of our Journal. Two notable presidential addresses by the second holder of the office, Sir Robert Watson-Watt, in the early 1950s surveyed separately the air and the shipping industries and, as was proper from one so directly associated with the origins of radar, made close reference to this form of navigation aid.

Type
Presidential Address
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1974

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References

REFERENCES

Watson-Watt, R. (1951). Navigation and the aircraft industry. This Journal, 4, 1.Google Scholar
Watson-Watt, R. (1952). Navigation and the shipping industry. This Journal, 5, 1.Google Scholar
Watson-Watt, R. (1946). I.E.E. Radiolocation Convention Proceedings, Part IIIA, No. 1, p. 11.Google Scholar
Ratcliffe, J. A. (1960). Physics of the Upper Atmosphere, Academic Press, New York and London, p. 427.Google Scholar
Watt, A. D. (1967). VLF Radio Engineer, Pergamon Press, p. 472.Google Scholar