The subject of this paper is the complicated, sometimes dramatic, and never
-published events around the development of the L-band magnetrons and pulse
d radar in Kharkov, Ukraine (then the USSR), in the 1920-30s. Magnetron stu
dies were started in the Kharkov State University by Prof. Abram Slutskin.
By the end of the decade, they reached the world's highest level in terms o
f achieved output power and frequency. This work was continued and greatly
extended in next decade, when the Ukrainian Institute of Physics and Techno
logy was established, and Slutskin obtained there his second job, as a head
of the Laboratory of Electromagnetic Oscillations. Based on the successful
development of sources, in 1935, he started work on developing a three-coo
rdinate radar. At that time, it was far from clear that L band and the puls
ed method would be more promising. Two-antenna and single-antenna radars we
re designed, fabricated, and tested, with all-metal and wire-grid three-met
er parabolic reflectors. The war disrupted the plans of the radar team, whi
ch had to move the laboratory to central Asia. The radar that was developed
was not put into serial production; however, many associated ideas and inn
ovations were well ahead of the contemporary level of technology. The paper
also throws some light on how hard it was for scientists and engineers to
work in the Orwellian environment of the pre-war USSR.