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  2. Artillery sound ranging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artillery_sound_ranging

    The US Army also used sound locators. [14] US Army sound ranging units took part in nearly all battles in which the army participated after November 1942. By the end of the war there were 25 observation battalions with 13,000 men. [15] During the Okinawa campaign, the US Army used its sound ranging sets to provide effective counter battery fire ...

  3. List of British Asdic systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British_Asdic_systems

    Asdic was the British version of sonar developed at the end of World War I based on the work of French physicist Paul Langevin and Russian engineer M. Constantin Chilowsky. The system was developed as a means to detect and locate submarines by their reflection of sound waves.

  4. Acoustic mirror - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_mirror

    The Maltese sound mirror is known locally as "the ear" . The Dungeness mirrors, known colloquially as the "listening ears", consist of three large concrete reflectors built in the 1920s–1930s.

  5. Acoustic location - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_location

    Swedish soldiers operating an acoustic locator in 1940. Acoustic location is a method of determining the position of an object or sound source by using sound waves. Location can take place in gases (such as the atmosphere), liquids (such as water), and in solids (such as in the earth).

  6. Counter-battery radar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counter-battery_radar

    Radar is the most recently developed means of locating hostile artillery. The emergence of indirect fire in World War I saw the development of sound ranging, flash spotting and aerial reconnaissance, both visual and photographic. Radars, like sound ranging and flash spotting, require hostile guns, etc., to fire before they can be located.

  7. Geophysical MASINT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geophysical_MASINT

    Geophysical MASINT is a branch of Measurement and Signature Intelligence (MASINT) that involves phenomena transmitted through the earth (ground, water, atmosphere) and manmade structures including emitted or reflected sounds, pressure waves, vibrations, and magnetic field or ionosphere disturbances.

  8. High-frequency direction finding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-frequency_direction...

    At first, the UK's detection system consisted of a number of shore stations in the British Isles and North Atlantic, which would coordinate their interceptions to determine locations. The distances involved in locating U-boats in the Atlantic from shore-based DF stations were so great, and DF accuracy was relatively inefficient, so the fixes ...

  9. COBRA (radar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COBRA_(radar)

    COBRA COunter Battery RAdar is a Counter-battery radar system developed jointly by Thales, Airbus Defence and Space and Lockheed Martin for the French, British and German Armed Forces. It is a mobile Active electronically scanned array 3D radar based on a wheeled chassis for the purpose of enemy field artillery acquisition.