British Ministry of Transport International Meeting on Radio Aids to Marine Navigation, May 1946, Volume II, Radio Navigation Radar and Positioning Fixing Systems for Use in Marine Navigation, London, His Majesty's Stationery Office1946.
2.
Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, Volume 93 Part Illa 1946, Proceedings of the Radiolocation Convention..
3.
Three Steps to Victory, Sir Robert Watson-Watt, Odhams Press Limited, 1957.
4.
Technical History of the Beginnings of Radar. Dr S.S. Swords Peter Peregrinus (IEE) 1986 ISBN 0-86341 −043-X.
5.
Radar Days, E.G. Bowen, Adam Hilger1987. ISBN 0-85274-590-7.
6.
Radar Development to 1945, Peter Peregrinus Ltd. (IEE)1988 ISBN 0-86341-139-8 (also contains an important paper by Professor Nakajima on “The History of Japanese Radar development to 1945”).
7.
Metres to Microwaves — British Developments of Active Components for Radar Systems — 1937 to 1944, E.B. Kallick, Peter Pereginus (IEE) 1990, ISBN 0-86341-212-2.
8.
Boffin — A Personal Story of the Early Days of Radar, Radio Astronomy and Quantum Optics, R. Hanbury Brown, 1991, ISBN 0-85274-317-3.
9.
Echoes of War, Sir Bernard Lovell, Adam Hilger, 1991, ISBN 0-85274-317-3.
10.
Tracking the History of Radar, The IEEE-Rutgers Centre for the History of Electrical Engineering & Deutsches Museum, 1994. ISBN 0-07803-9987-0.
11.
Radar — The Developments of Equipments for the Royal Navy 1935–45, edited by KingsleyF.A. for the Naval Radar Trust 1995, ISBN 0-333-61210-8.
12.
A Radar History of World War II. Technical and Military Imperative, Louis Brown, 1999, Institute of Publishing, ISBN 0-7503-05659-9.