No. Courtney Simon (American) did.
Scottish physicist Sir Robert Watson-Watt is credited with inventing RADAR (Radio Detection and Ranging) in the early 20th century. It was a crucial technology used during World War II for detecting and tracking objects such as aircraft and ships.
The term "ionosphere" was coined by Robert Watson-Watt in the early 20th century. He was a Scottish physicist and radar pioneer who studied the Earth's upper atmosphere and its ionized layers.
The image generated by radar is typically called a radar image or radar map.
Allistair is the Scottish form of ALexander, which means 'defending men'.
James Hutton did not invent anything. He was a Scottish geologist known as the founder of modern geology due to his theory of uniformitarianism. Hutton proposed that the Earth is constantly changing due to slow and continuous processes, which laid the foundation for our current understanding of geology.
the radar
radar
no
Heddie Lamarr
Radar was invented in 1935 by Scottish physicist Sir Robert Watson-Watt. He developed the first practical radar system for detecting aircraft.
They didn't invent radar, TV, angled flight decks, jet engines, bagpipes or haggis.
No. The Scottish invented curling in the 1500's.
World War II events.
He was a famous Scottish mathematician of the late 1800s.
Scottish physicist Sir Robert Watson-Watt is credited with inventing RADAR (Radio Detection and Ranging) in the early 20th century. It was a crucial technology used during World War II for detecting and tracking objects such as aircraft and ships.
Henry Hess did not invent sonar or radar. Sonar was first developed in the early 20th century by several scientists, including Lewis Nixon and Reginald Fessenden, while radar was independently developed by various scientists in the 1930s, such as Sir Robert Watson-Watt and his team in the UK.
he did but he was Scottish born :P