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  2. Diffused lighting camouflage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffused_lighting_camouflage

    The concept behind diffused lighting camouflage was to project light on to the sides of a ship, to make its brightness match its background. Projectors were mounted on temporary supports attached to the hull and the prototype was developed to include automatic control of brightness using a photocell. The concept was never put into production ...

  3. Active camouflage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_camouflage

    The first of these was the so-called diffused lighting camouflage tested on Canadian Navy corvettes including HMCS Rimouski. This was followed in the United States Army Air Forces with the airborne Yehudi lights project, and trials in ships of the Royal Navy and the US Navy. [11] The Yehudi lights project placed low-intensity blue lights on ...

  4. Yehudi lights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yehudi_lights

    The use of Yehudi lights to camouflage aircraft by matching their luminance with the background sky was developed, in part, by the US Navy's Project Yehudi from 1943 onwards, following pioneering experiments in the Canadian diffused lighting camouflage project for ships early in the Second World War. [3]

  5. Counter-illumination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counter-illumination

    Diffused lighting camouflage, in which visible light is projected on to the sides of ships to match the faint glow of the night sky, was trialled by Canada's National Research Council from 1941 onwards, and then by the Royal Navy, during the Second World War. Some 60 light projectors were mounted all around the hull and on the ships ...

  6. Category:Ship camouflage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Ship_camouflage

    Camouflage systems and patterns designed for ships. Military camouflage measures were applied to both military and civil ships in the First World War, so this category can include measures applied to civil ships as long as the intention is protection against military attack.

  7. HMS Largs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Largs

    HMS Largs was used in 1942 for secret trials of a Canadian invention, diffused lighting camouflage. This used dimmable lamps for counter-illumination, camouflage by bringing the brightness of the ship's superstructure to the same as the night sky. The system of 60 lamps reduced the distance at which a ship could be seen from a surfaced ...

  8. HMCS Cobalt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMCS_Cobalt

    On 22 January 1941 she took part in the Canadian Navy's first secret trial of diffused lighting camouflage, a technology for concealing ships from submarines at night. [12] She worked up and joined Halifax Force, but left on 23 May 1941 with the six other corvettes that were the nucleus of the new Newfoundland Escort Force (NEF).

  9. Category:Counter-illumination camouflage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Counter...

    Camouflage by actively emitting light to match the background, whether in animals or military use. Pages in category "Counter-illumination camouflage" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.