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Duga radar - Wikipedia
Duga (Russian: Дуга, lit. 'arc' or 'curve') was an over-the-horizon radar (OTH) system used in the Soviet Union as part of its early-warning radar network for missile defense. It operated from July 1976 to December 1989.
Duga-1 Radar Station - Chernobyl 35 years later
Duga-1 is one of the three Soviet ‘over the horizon’ radar stations. A system made for early detection of attacks by ballistic rockets. This radar system was developed in the Soviet Union in the 1950s, during the Cold War. The array station was hidden in a forest together with the secret military town Chernobyl-2.
Duga远程警戒雷达 - 百度百科
Duga远程警戒雷达是苏联在冷战时期所建设的超视距雷达,是苏联反弹道导弹远程警戒网络的一部分,于1976年7月至1989年12月期间服役。 该系统总共部署了两套,一套位于乌克兰苏维埃社会主义共和国(今天的乌克兰)境内的切尔诺贝利与切尔尼戈夫附近,另一套 ...
The Abandoned Duga-1 Radar in the Chernobyl Nuclear Exclusion …
The Duga-1 radar, nicknamed the Russian Woodpecker, was located near the town of Chernobyl but was abandoned shortly after the disaster.
Duga远程警戒雷达 - 维基百科,自由的百科全书
Duga远程警戒雷达 (俄语: Дуга)是 苏联 在 冷战时期 所建设的 超视距雷达,是苏联 反弹道导弹 远程警戒网络的一部分,于1976年7月至1989年12月期间服役。 该系统总共部署了两套,一套位于 乌克兰苏维埃社会主义共和国 (今天的 乌克兰)境内的 切尔诺贝利 、 切尔尼戈夫 附近與 尼古拉耶夫州,另一套位于东 西伯利亚,現今 哈巴羅夫斯克邊疆區 內。 Duga雷达的峰值功率约10 MW,工作在 短波 波段。 其信号往往突然出现,发出10 Hz的尖锐敲击声 [1],故得名 俄罗斯 …
Chernobyl Duga (Soviet Woodpecker Radar) - Chernobylstory…
Duga-1 operated two antennas, receiver and transmitter, 60 km apart from each other. Transmitter was located in military town Liubech-1, Northern Ukraine. The other part of this Duga, antenna which had to receive the signal, was built 10 km away from Chernobyl town. It consisted of two parts to cover wider range of frequencies.
Duga Radar (Russian Woodpecker) - HFUnderground
2019年7月25日 · The Duga Radar (Russian: Дуга), nicknamed the "Russian Woodpecker", was a Soviet over-the-horizon (OTH) radar system used as part of the Soviet missile defense early-warning radar network. The system operated from July 1976 to December 1989.
The Russian Woodpecker: The Story Of The Mysterious Duga Radar
2021年8月12日 · Despite the size, the Soviets built two, one near the now-abandoned town of Chernobyl, which was called DUGA-1, and another in Siberia, called DUGA-2. The radars were protected by their own air-defense systems to ensure their survival during a conflict.
DUGA-1 - Architectuul
DUGA-1. Even before the successful testing of the experimental station at Nikolayev in 1969 was complete, it was agreed that a larger over-the-horizon radar, DUGA-1, would be built in Chernobyl-2, a settlement close to the (then only planned) nuclear power plant of the same name.
The Russian Woodpecker Revisited - N6CC
2011年1月3日 · The DUGA-1 site was abandoned in 1989 due in part to significant radiation contamination from the explosion and melt down of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant (and the implosion and melt down of the “Union of Soviet Socialist Republics” and the Communist Party).