DocumentCode
1773574
Title
A German radar chain, facing the British Chain Home during WW II
Author
Blanchard, Yves ; van Genderen, Piet
fYear
2014
fDate
8-10 Oct. 2014
Firstpage
29
Lastpage
32
Abstract
The <;<; Atlantic Wall >>, built by the German forces along the occupied coasts of Western Europa as a rampart to protect them against Allied landing attempts, included a powerful chain of anti-naval and anti-air detection devices, which may be seen as a kind of counterpart to the British Chain Home. But its structure was quite different, and probably was most efficient at the time it was built. Today, 70 years later, remains of this continental chain can still be seen in many places, especially in France. Their <;<; archaeological >> study may enlighten the war time archives and documents from both sides, to explain how it was built, how it worked, and evaluate its supposed efficiency. The paper describes also the progressive discovery of this chain by the allies, which lead them to conceive a lot of counter-measures, which made it quite inefficient during the crucial days of June 44 in Normandy.
Keywords
military radar; Atlantic wall; British chain home; German radar chain; WW II; allied landing; anti-air detection devices; anti-naval detection devices; Europe; Radar; Radar antennas; Sea measurements; Surveillance; Technological innovation; Atlantikwall; German radar; radar story;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
European Radar Conference (EuRAD), 2014 11th
Conference_Location
Rome
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/EuRAD.2014.6991199
Filename
6991199
Link To Document