A Legends Nominee
I would like to nominate Dr. Robert Page
of the Naval Research Laboratory who
made major contributions toward the initial
invention of radar and the monopulse
radar tracking technique. The invention
patent No. 1,981,884, “System for Detecting
Objects by Radio,” by Taylor, A. H.,
Hyland, L., and Young, L. C., of the Naval
Research Laboratory was successful with
a contribution by Page with his invention
No. 2,512,673, “Radio Pulse Duplexing
System,” (1950). Page’s contribution
to the radar field was the invention of
the monopulse tracking radar, “Simultaneous
Lobe Comparison, Pulse Echo
Locator System,” Patent No. 2,929,056,
March 15, 1960. The patent was filed in
1947, but because of military security
it could not be published until 1960.The invention involved several ingenious
microwave signal processing techniques
when few microwave waveguide devices
were available. This invention led to the
development of the first high-precision
monopulse tracking radar, the AN/FPS-
16 that could meet the requirements for
range safety at Cape Canaveral at the
initiation of our space program. Since then
the monopulse tracking technique is used
in most military applications including the
AN/SPY-1 ship defense phased radars on
our Navy’s Aegis ships, the Patriot missile
defense radar, airborne and shipboard
fire control radars, and the AN/FPQ-6
satellite tracking radar.
The initial monopulse technique was
called “simultaneous lobe comparison,”
which replaced the old pencil beams scanning
and sequential lobing techniques.
The monopulse technique provided target
angle and range tracking information
on each single pulse that eliminated the
susceptibility to sources of error and
provided the means to obtain very high
precision target tracking.
Page was also our Director of Research
at the Naval Research Laboratory. I was
involved with the experimental evaluation
of the original model of the monopulse
radar and amazed at the ingenuity of the
“home-made” microwave circuitry that
made it work.
Dean D. Howard
Editor’s note:
We agree that monopulse-tracking radar
continues to be critical to today’s defense,
space, and other applications, and are
happy to learn more about one of the
individuals who brought this technology
to life. Thank you for sharing a bit of
your experience and knowledge.—Nancy
Friedrich
Correction:
In the October article, “Digital RF Processor
Serves Plethora Of Cellular Systems”
(p. 84), the term “DRF” was used when
it should have been “DRP.” We apologize
for any confusion.