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DTM History - Historical Highlights - 1925 |
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Unveiling the Ionosphere
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![[Breit & Tuve]](http://www.dtm.ciw.edu/images/stories/tuve.jpg)
Photo: Breit and Tuve at DTM (February 14, 1927)
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The presence of a conducting layer in the upper atmosphere that made
long-distance radio communication possible was hypothesized in 1902.
But experimental proof of the existence of the "Kennelly-Heaviside
layer" (now called the ionosphere) was not forthcoming for more than
two decades. Beginning in the summer of 1925, DTM researchers Gregory
Breit and Merle Tuve developed a method of bouncing pulsed radio signals
off the ionized layer and observing the echoes. Through cooperative
experiments with the Naval Research Laboratory, ionosphere heights
of 50 to 100 miles were demonstrated. Their technique paved the way
for the worldwide study of radio transmission and laid the groundwork
for the later development of radar. |
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