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Technology

Now it can be told

By Barry Fox

12 August 2000

When British government censors first read a radar patent that the
electronics company Marconi filed in 1982, they immediately slapped a secrecy
order on it. After 18 years, the government now thinks it is safe to reveal
details (GB 2 341 994). Radar can produce false readings when, for example, the
signal is reflected by more than one surface. Marconi’s engineers analysed the
spurious signals and found that they only lasted a few milliseconds.

In Marconi’s patent, reflected radar signals are delayed for a fraction of a
second to allow pulses of less than 1.5 milliseconds to be filtered…

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