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Infrared astronomy has undergone an enormous revolution during the
last decade. Despite the great technical difficulties of building
detectors in a cryogenic environment, the scientific advances in
infrared astronomy have been astounding. In the near future many
more advances can be expected from still newer developments in
telescope and detector designs. High quality detector arrays and
passively cooled telescopes are very promising techniques for
achieving considerably larger apertures. This volume contains the
refereed papers from the workshop on 'Next Generation Infrared
Observatory', dealing with all new aspects of future infrared
telescopes.
Infrared astronomy has undergone an enormous revolution during the
last decade. Despite the great technical difficulties of building
detectors in a cryogenic environment, the scientific advances in
infrared astronomy have been astounding. In the near future many
more advances can be expected from still newer developments in
telescope and detector designs. High quality detector arrays and
passively cooled telescopes are very promising techniques for
achieving considerably larger apertures. This volume contains the
refereed papers from the workshop on 'Next Generation Infrared
Observatory', dealing with all new aspects of future infrared
telescopes.
Early on Sunday, 7 December 1941, the air and naval forces of the
Imperial Japanese Navy attacked the U.S. Pacific Fleet at anchor in
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. President Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR)
recorded the day as "a date which will live in infamy" in his
speech to a joint session of Congress. Subsequent investigations
and histories judged U.S. intelligence as unprepared in its failure
to predict the attack at Pearl Harbor. Yet FDR also listed the
other locations Japan attacked in those first twenty-four hours
starting with the attack at Kota Bharu in Malaya. Reviewing U.S.
intelligence estimates and "war warning" messages against Imperial
Japanese war plans and actions, U.S. intelligence understood
Imperial Japan's intentions and plans far better than is recorded.
Of the places listed in the 27 November 1941 "war warning"--"the
Philippines, Thai or Kra Malay] Peninsula and possibly Borneo"--two
were attacked on that first day of war and the last, Borneo, a week
later. On that first day of war, Japan also attacked Guam, Hong
Kong, Singapore, and Wake and Midway Islands, the latter two
reinforced against impending war with Japan in early December 1941
by U.S. aircraft carriers. The surprise of the attack on the U.S.
Pacific Fleet overshadows the accuracy of U.S. intelligence
estimates prior to the Pacific War.
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