4. Radar identification
Since the beginning of the Second World War, radar has played an
ever-increasing role in detecting the presence of objects and/or obstacles
(ships or aircraft) representing a potential danger. In the case of moving
objects, radar makes it possible to determine their distance and speed. Radar is
also used in navigation by ships and aircraft to mitigate the consequences of
bad visibility. Some radar systems are equipped for observing the ground from an
aircraft, along the same lines as aerial photography; however, unlike cameras,
radar has the advantage of being independent of weather conditions (a layer of
clouds does not interfere with observation).
As a "target" cannot be directly identified by the echo it
produces on a radar screen, a device called IFF (Identification Friend or Foe)
was developed during the Second World War and installed on most warships and
military aircraft.
The device has since been improved and adapted to the
requirements of civil aviation. Known as a radar transponder, it is operated
with Secondary Surveillance Radar (SSR) systems. It is very widely used, not
only by passenger airliners, but also by all civilian and military aircraft
using controlled airspaces, including almost all private aircraft, and thus
contributes to the high grade of flight safety achieved today.
As far as we know, all warships of a certain importance are
equipped with IFF radar equipment and SSR systems which allow them to monitor
and identify civil maritime and air traffic. We assume that this is also the
case for AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control System) aircraft assigned to
similar duties.
Tests have been carried out to determine whether it was possible
to use aeronautical-type radar transponders to identify hospital ships. To this
end, a standard aeronautical radar transponder unit was installed on a launch
and set to Mode 3/A, which is common to both military and civil air traffic
control. In spite of the rudimentary nature of the installation and the
relatively low height of the transponder aerial, the results obtained have been
very positive.

Aviation Transponder Control Unit,
installed into the instrument panel of a twin-jet executive aircraft. (
Photo
by courtesy of Allied-Signal Aerospace Company, BENDIX/KING General Aviation
Avionics Divisions, Olathe, Kansas,
USA)