Engineering:Royal Signals and Radar Establishment

From HandWiki
Revision as of 19:55, 3 February 2024 by Smart bot editor (talk | contribs) (over-write)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

[ ⚑ ] 52°06′00″N 2°18′58″W / 52.100°N 2.316°W / 52.100; -2.316


The Royal Signals and Radar Establishment (RSRE) was a scientific research establishment within the Ministry of Defence (MoD) of the United Kingdom . It was located primarily at Malvern in Worcestershire, England .[1] The RSRE motto was Ubique Sentio (Latin for "I sense everywhere").

History

Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip visiting RSRE in 1976.

RSRE was formed in 1976 by an amalgamation of previous research organizations; these included the Royal Radar Establishment (RRE), itself derived from the World War II-era Telecommunications Research Establishment, the Signals Research and Development Establishment (SRDE) in Christchurch, Dorset, and the Services Electronic Research Laboratory (SERL) at Baldock.

Beginning in 1979, the SRDE and SERL moved to Malvern to join the RRE's location.[2] There were several out-stations in Worcestershire, including the ex-RAF airfields at Defford and Pershore and the satellite tracking station at Sheriffs Lench.

In April 1991 RSRE amalgamated with other defence research establishments to form the Defence Research Agency, which in April 1995 amalgamated with more organisations to form the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency. In June 2001 this became independent of the MoD, with approximately two-thirds of it being incorporated into QinetiQ, a commercial company owned by the MoD, and the remainder into the fully government-owned laboratory DSTL. In 2003 the Carlyle Group bought a private equity stake (~30%) in QinetiQ.

Research

Portable satellite ground station built in the late 1970s by RSRE, primarily for use with Skynet 2B. Deployed in 1979 to support the peace-keeping operation in Rhodesia.

Some of the most important technologies developed from work at RSRE are radar, satellite communications, thermography, liquid crystal displays, speech synthesis and the Touchscreen.

Predecessor organisation Signals Research and Development Establishment (SRDE) had been involved in the development of military communications satellites, within the U.S. Interim Defense Communication Satellite Program (IDCSP) and the development of the British Skynet 1 and 2 satellite types. The SRDE establishment moved to a RSRE facility at RAF Defford near Malvern in 1980, which had the benefit of flat terrain for good satellite dish positioning and the nearby Bredon Hill for satellite simulators.[3] RSRE was involved in the design and testing of Skynet 4 and its ground facilities and terminals.[4][5]

Contributions to computer science made by the RSRE included ALGOL 68RS (a portable implementation of ALGOL 68, following on from ALGOL 68R developed by RRE), Coral 66, radial basis function networks, hierarchical self-organising networks (deep autoencoders), the VIPER high-integrity microprocessor, the ELLA hardware description language, and the TenDRA C/C++ compiler.

RSRE was an early researcher of TCP/IP in Europe, along with Peter Kirstein's group at University College London and NDRE in Norway.[6] The first email sent by a head of state was sent from the RSRE over the ARPANET by Queen Elizabeth II on March 26, 1976.[7][8] RSRE was allocated class A Internet net 25 in 1979,[9] which later became the Ministry of Defence address space, providing 16.7 million IPv4 addresses.[10]

References

  1. Putley, E. H. (January 1985). "The history of the RSRE". Physics in Technology 16 (1): 13–18. doi:10.1088/0305-4624/16/1/401. 
  2. Eds. Robert Bud and Philip Gummett, Cold War Hot Science: Applied Research in Britain's Defence Laboratories 1945-1990, Harwood, 1999 ISBN:90-5702-481-0
  3. Harris, Dick (July 2018). "Defford Satellite Communications". https://mraths.org.uk/?page_id=2868. 
  4. T C Tozer (April 1987). An Introduction to Military Satellite Communications (Report). Royal Signals and Radar Establishment. RSRE Memorandum 3976. https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a187005.pdf. Retrieved 26 January 2021. 
  5. P J Skilton (January 1989). Tactical UK Military Satellite Ground Terminals - A Research and Development Review (Report). Royal Signals and Radar Establishment. RSRE Memorandum 4262. https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a209863.pdf. Retrieved 19 January 2021. 
  6. Postel, J. (7 November 1980). "Internet Meeting Notes – 7-8-9 October 1980". https://www.rfc-editor.org/ien/ien160.txtnone "Internet Meeting Notes". http://www.postel.org/pipermail/end2end-interest/2009-November.txtnone ;"Internet Delay Experiments". https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc0889.txtnone ;"The Internet History". http://www.perflensburg.se/Privatsida/cp-web/AZXXIH.HTMnone ;"30 years of the international internet" (in en-GB). 2003-11-19. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3280897.stm. 
  7. Metz, Cade (2012-12-25). "How the Queen of England Beat Everyone to the Internet". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. https://www.wired.com/2012/12/queen-and-the-internet/. Retrieved 2020-01-09. 
  8. Left, Sarah (2002-03-13). "Email timeline" (in en-GB). The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2002/mar/13/internetnews. 
  9. Postel, J. (3 May 1979). "Assigned Numbers". USC - Information Sciences Institute. https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc755. 
  10. "Study into UK IPv4 and IPv6 allocations". Reid Technical Facilities Management (Ofcom). 2014. Ofcom/140701-00. https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0031/37795/rtfm.pdf. Retrieved 6 April 2020. 

External links