1st Signal Command (United States) - definição. O que é 1st Signal Command (United States). Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é 1st Signal Command (United States) - definição


1st Signal Command (United States)         
MILITARY UNIT
The 1st Signal Command was a Signal Corps command of the United States Army, based at Fort Riley between 1967 and 1969.
SRDL         
  • World War II recruitment poster (1942)
  • <br />A Combat Documentation Specialist of the [[1108th Signal Brigade]] documents [[10th Mountain Division]] soldiers as they search a mountainside near Shkin Firebase in late 2003.
  • ''Argosy Lemal'']] c. 1940, one of two Australian vessels acquired by the SWPA chief signal officer for the SWPA CP fleet.
  • Standard Issue Civil War Signal Corps Kit, complete with flags and torches.
  • ballooning]] program
  • Repeater Station]], [[Taegu, Korea]]. Quad cable terminal on left, testboard on right and center on 1 August 1950.
  • Representing Myer's "Wigwag".
  • Radio operator Cpl. John Robbins, 41st Signal, 41st Infantry Division, operating his SCR 188 in a sandbagged hut at Station NYU. Dobodura, [[New Guinea]] on 9 May 1943.
  • US Army Signal Corps automobile at the Manassas maneuvers in 1904
  • reenactment]]
  • 60px
  • The Signal Corps Regimental Color
  • wigwag]].
BRANCH OF THE UNITED STATES ARMY CREATING AND MANAGING COMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS FOR THE COMMAND AND CONTROL OF COMBINED ARMS FORCES
United States Armed Forces Signal Corps Unit; Army Signal Corps; US Signal Corps; U.S. Army Signal Corps; US Army Signal Corps; US Army Signal Corp; U.S. Signal Corps; Department of the Army, Signal Corps; U.S. Signal Service; United States Signal Services; Army Pictorial Service; Chief Signal Officer; SRDL; Army Signal Research and Development Laboratory; U.S. Army Signal Research and Development Laboratory; United States Army Signal Research and Development Laboratory; US Army Signal Research and Development Laboratory; Signal Corps (U.S. Army); Signal Corps (United States Army); Signal Service
Small algebraic specification language, allows {distfix operators}. ["A Constructive Method for Abstract Algebraic Software Specification", H. Klaeren, Theor Computer Sci 30, pp.134-204, 1984].
Aerospace Defense Command         
  • ADC squadrons at [[Thule Site J]] and [[Clear AFS]] used each AN/FPS-50 to sweep 2 radar beams each ~1° in azimuth x 3.5° elevation (illustrated much less thick). Azimuth sweeping created a "Lower Fan" centered at 3.5° elevation and "Upper Fan" at 7° (both illustrated much higher) with "revisit time of 2 sec" for ICBM detection.
  • The "war room" of the [[Chidlaw Building]]'s Combined Operations Center took over command center operations in 1963 from the nearby Ent AFB "main battle control center" (screens show missile impact ellipses for an exercise.)
  • Emblem of Air Defense, Tactical Air Command (ADTAC)
  • Shield of Air Defense Command
  • B-57E, AF Ser. No. 55-4277, a target towing aircraft of the 8th Bomb Squadron at [[Yokota AB]], Japan in 1958. Note the bright orange paint on the upper fuselage and wings
  • on 31 December 1969]].
  • [[Convair F-106A Delta Dart]] of ADC's [[5th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron]] near [[Mount Rushmore]] (lower right background)
  • 4786th TS]]. Using the AN/ASG-18 from the F-108 Rapier program and Falcon missile developed for the F-108A, the Mach 3 interceptor was funded by Congress with $90 million for a 14 May 1965 USAF order of 93 F-12B aircraft (cancelled by SECDEF).
  • Martin EB-57E, AF Ser. No. 55-4241, of the 4577th DSES flying over the Great Salt Lake, Utah about 1970. Retired 30 July 1979
  • Artist's impression of the North American XF-108 Rapier
MILITARY UNIT
Air Defense Command (United States Air Force); ADCOM; Aerospace Defence Command; Air Defense Command
Aerospace Defense Command was a major command of the United States Air Force, responsible for continental air defense. It was activated in 1968 and disbanded in 1980.

Wikipédia

1st Signal Command (United States)
The 1st Signal Command was a Signal Corps command of the United States Army, based at Fort Riley between 1967 and 1969.