Wikipedia (chū-iû ê pek-kho-choân-su) beh kā lí kóng...
Long-range radar
antenna, used to track space objects and ballistic missiles.
Radar of the type used for detection of aircraft. It rotates steadily, sweeping the airspace with a narrow beam.
Luî-ta̍t (ing-gú: radar; bô-suàñ-tēn thàm-tshik hām tshik-kū)[1][2] sī tsi̍t-tsióng thàm-tshik hē-thóng, luî-ta̍t sú-iōng bô-suàñ tēn-pho [en] lâi khak-tīng bú-thé siong-tuì-u hēn-tiûñ ê kū-lî (tshik-kū [en]), kak-tōo hām kìng-hiòng sok-tōo [en]. Luî-ta̍t ē-tàng iōng teh thàm-tshik hui-ki, tsûn-pi̍k [en], ú-hâng-khì, tō-tān, ki-tōng tshia-lióng, thiñ-khì hîng-thài hām tē-hîng [en]. Tsi̍t-ê luî-ta̍t hē-thóng pau-kua bô-suàñ-tēn [en] hi̍k-tsiá bî-pho [en]-i̍k sán-sing tēn-tsû-pho ê huat-siā-khì [en], huat-siā then-suàñ, tsiap-siu thian-suàñ (thong-siông iōng-teh huat-siā hām tsiap-siu thian-suànn), í-kip iōng teih khak-tīng bu̍t-thé ti̍k-sìng ê tsiap-siu-khì [en] hām tshú-lí-khì [en] tsoo-sîng. Lâi-tsū huat-siā-khì ê bô-suàñ tēn-pho (bi̍k-tshiong hi̍k-tsiá liân-suà) hōo bu̍t-thé lâi huán-siā tēn-pho koh-kā tēn-pho huán-siā tńg-khì tsiap-siu-khì, tsū-án-ni tō ē-tàng thê-kiong iú-kuan bu̍t-thé [en] uī-tì [en] hām sok-tōo ê sìn-sit.
- Barrett, Dick, "All you ever wanted to know about British air defence radar". The Radar Pages. (History and details of various British radar systems)
- Buderi, "Telephone History: Radar History". Privateline.com. (Anecdotal account of the carriage of the world's first high power cavity magnetron from Britain to the US during WW2.)
- Ekco Radar WW2 Shadow Factory Archived 12 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine. The secret development of British radar.
- ES310 "Introduction to Naval Weapons Engineering.". (Radar fundamentals section)
- Hollmann, Martin, "Radar Family Tree". Radar World.
- Penley, Bill, and Jonathan Penley, "Early Radar History—an Introduction". 2002.
- Pub 1310 Radar Navigation and Maneuvering Board Manual, National Imagery and Mapping Agency, Bethesda, MD 2001 (US govt publication '...intended to be used primarily as a manual of instruction in navigation schools and by naval and merchant marine personnel.')
- Wesley Stout, 1946 "Radar – The Great Detective" Archived 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine. Early development and production by Chrysler Corp. during WWII.
- Swords, Seán S., "Technical History of the Beginnings of Radar", IEE History of Technology Series, Vol. 6, London: Peter Peregrinus, 1986
- Reg Batt (1991). The radar army: winning the war of the airwaves. ISBN 978-0-7090-4508-3.
- E.G. Bowen (1998-01-01). Radar Days. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-7503-0586-0.
- Michael Bragg (2002-05-01). RDF1: The Location of Aircraft by Radio Methods 1935–1945. Twayne Publishers. ISBN 978-0-9531544-0-1.
- Louis Brown (1999). A radar history of World War II: technical and military imperatives. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-7503-0659-1.
- Robert Buderi (1996). The invention that changed the world: how a small group of radar pioneers won the Second World War and launched a technological revolution. ISBN 978-0-684-81021-8.
- Burch, David F., Radar For Mariners, McGraw Hill, 2005, ISBN 978-0-07-139867-1.
- Ian Goult (2011). Secret Location: A witness to the Birth of Radar and its Postwar Influence. History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-5776-5.
- Peter S. Hall (March 1991). Radar. Potomac Books Inc. ISBN 978-0-08-037711-7.
- Derek Howse; Naval Radar Trust (February 1993). Radar at sea: the royal Navy in World War 2. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-55750-704-4.
- R.V. Jones (August 1998). Most Secret War. Wordsworth Editions Ltd. ISBN 978-1-85326-699-7.
- Kaiser, Gerald, Chapter 10 in "A Friendly Guide to Wavelets", Birkhauser, Boston, 1994.
- Colin Latham; Anne Stobbs (January 1997). Radar: A Wartime Miracle. Sutton Pub Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7509-1643-1.
- François Le Chevalier (2002). Principles of radar and sonar signal processing. Artech House Publishers. ISBN 978-1-58053-338-6.
- David Pritchard (August 1989). The radar war: Germany's pioneering achievement 1904-45. Harpercollins. ISBN 978-1-85260-246-8.
- Merrill Ivan Skolnik (1980-12-01). Introduction to radar systems. ISBN 978-0-07-066572-9.
- Merrill Ivan Skolnik (1990). Radar handbook. McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-057913-2.
- George W. Stimson (1998). Introduction to airborne radar. SciTech Publishing. ISBN 978-1-891121-01-2.
- Younghusband, Eileen., Not an Ordinary Life. How Changing Times Brought Historical Events into my Life, Cardiff Centre for Lifelong Learning, Cardiff, 2009., ISBN 978-0-9561156-9-0 (Pages 36–67 contain the experiences of a WAAF radar plotter in WWII.)
- Younghusband, Eileen. One Woman's War. Cardiff. Candy Jar Books. 2011. ISBN 978-0-9566826-2-8
- David Zimmerman (February 2001). Britain's shield: radar and the defeat of the Luftwaffe. Sutton Pub Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7509-1799-5.