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Johannes Plendl

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Johannes "Hans" Plendl (19001992), German radar pioneer, was the scientist who made possible the early German bombing successes in World War II.

Plendl was born in 1900 in Munich, German Empire and began his career as a radio and beam engineer for Telefunken corporation. His early research into radio and radar beams necessitated additional names for newly discovered levels of the earth's atmosphere, and Plendl is generally credited with being the first to use the term ionosphere in text.

With the rise of the National Socialists in Germany, the promise of Plendl's research was quickly noted by the Luftwaffe. Hermann Goering appointed Plendl "Plenipotentiary of Long Range Bombing," and ordered him to come up with night navigation devices for German airplanes.

Plendl did not disappoint. His first invention, the "knickebein" (German for "crooked leg") though simple, was immensely effective during the early days of the war. The system employed transmitter towers on the English channel and North Sea to transmit radar beams over targets in England. German bombers carried primitive versions of the radar detector (also invented by Plendl) and complex clocks, the former to keep them on a path to their targets even on dark nights; the latter to tell the crew with precision when to unload the bombs.

Plendl (second from left, in dark uniform) leads a contingent of German War Brass, including Admiral Doenitz (center, in black greatcoat), on a tour of the Peenemunde base.
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Plendl (second from left, in dark uniform) leads a contingent of German War Brass, including Admiral Doenitz (center, in black greatcoat), on a tour of the Peenemunde base.

Later, more complex versions of the system (called X-Geraet, Y-Geraet, Lorenz Beam and Wotan) were also used with success, but this success waned a bit after the English successfully decoded top-secret German communications and began to employ sophisticated devices to jam the German radar beams. Nevertheless, Plendl's inventions made possible the terrible destruction of cities like Coventry and Warsau, and the uncertainty of life in London during The Blitz during the early part of the war.

During the later days of World War II, Plendl worked on the teams developing other German "wonder weapons," most notably the V-1 and V-2 rockets. In 1944, Adolf Hitler removed many scientists including Plendl and Plendl's colleague Werner Von Braun from their posts, allegedly for being too candid about German chances for victory.

At the end of the war, like other German scientists, Plendl was invited to come to the United States to aid in the American space program. Advocating for Plendl were several scientists who had been persecuted by the Nazis, who Plendl had saved from the Dachau concentration camp.

Plendl worked for the United States Air Force for several years, then returned to his native Germany. R.V. Jones, the British scientist who had worked on the other end of the channel to decode the German Enigma Machine code and to jam Plendl's beams, became a good friend. Johannes Plendl died in 1992.

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