释义 |
- History
- Projects Black Blue Brown Green Indigo Jade Orange Pink Purple Red Violet Yellow
- Non-Rainbow codes
- See also
- References
- External links
{{confused|Rainbow table}}{{Refimprove|date=July 2016}}{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2015}}{{Use British English|date=February 2015}}The Rainbow Codes were a series of code names used to disguise the nature of various British military research projects. They were mainly used by the Ministry of Supply from the end of the Second World War until 1958, when the ministry was broken up and its functions distributed among the forces. The codes were replaced by an alphanumeric code system. HistoryDuring WWII, British intelligence was able to glean details of new German technologies simply by considering their code names. For instance, when they began hearing of a new system known as Wotan, Reginald Victor Jones asked around and found that Wotan was a one-eyed god. Based on this, he guessed it was a radio navigation system using a single radio beam. This proved correct, and the Royal Air Force was able to quickly render it useless through jamming.[1] Looking to avoid making this sort of mistake, Ministry of Supply (MoS) initiated a system that would be entirely random, while still being easy to remember. Each rainbow code name was constructed from a randomly selected colour, plus an (often appropriate) noun taken from a list, for example: - "Blue" + "Steel" = Blue Steel, a nuclear-armed stand-off missile
- "Green" + "Mace" = Green Mace, an anti-aircraft (AA) gun.
While most colour and noun combinations were meaningless, some were real names, although quite unrelated to the project they designated. For example, "Black Maria" is also a name for a police van and the "Red Duster" is a name for the Red Ensign, the flag flown by British merchant ships. Some code names were not assigned through the official system, but created to sound like it. An example is the Blue Yeoman radar, an unofficial name created by combining the names of two other projects, Blue Riband and Orange Yeoman. The names were mostly dropped with the end of the Ministry in 1959. Its functions were transferred to the War Office, the Air Ministry that handled military aviation, and the newly created Ministry of Aviation in charge of civil aviation. After the reorganization, projects were mostly named with randomly selected codes comprising two letters and three digits, e.g. BL755, WE.177. However, rainbow codes continue to be used with some modern systems; current examples include the Blue Vixen radar[2] and the Orange Reaper Electronic Support Measures system. Projects{{Expand list|date=August 2008}}Black- Black Arrow {{Anchor|Black Arrow}} - a satellite launch vehicle derived from Blue Streak/Black Knight
- Black Knight {{Anchor|Black Knight}} - a launch vehicle used to test re-entry vehicles for Blue Streak
- Black Maria {{Anchor|Black Maria}} - fighter IFF interrogator
- Black Prince {{Anchor|Black Prince}} - proposed satellite launch vehicle based on Blue Streak/Black Knight — a.k.a. Blue Star
- Black Rock {{Anchor|Black Rock}} - surface to surface guided missile
Blue- Blue Anchor {{Anchor|Blue Anchor}} - X-Band CW target illumination radar for Bristol Bloodhound
- Blue Badger {{Anchor|Blue Badger}} - truck-mounted nuclear land mine - later renamed Violet Mist
- Blue Bishop {{Anchor|Blue Bishop}} - portable 2.5 MW nuclear-powered electrical generator - previously Green Janet
- Blue Boar {{Anchor|Blue Boar}} - TV-guided bomb[3][4]
- Blue Boy {{Anchor|Blue Boy}} - VHF speech scrambling
- Blue Bunny {{Anchor|Blue Bunny}} - ten-kiloton nuclear mine, see Blue Peacock
- Blue Cat {{Anchor|Blue Cat}} - nuclear warhead a.k.a. Tony - UK version of US W44, a.k.a. Tsetse
- Blue Cedar {{Anchor|Blue Cedar}} - AA No. 3 Mk. 7 mobile anti-aircraft radar
- Blue Danube {{Anchor|Blue Danube}} - the first British nuclear weapon in service
- Blue Devil {{Anchor|Blue Devil}} - T4 optical bombsight - drift and ground speed from Green Satin
- Blue Diamond {{Anchor|Blue Diamond}} - AA No. 7 anti-aircraft radar
- Blue Diver {{Anchor|Blue Diver}} - ARI (Airborne Radio Installation) 18075 airborne low-band VHF jammer - against metric frequency radar such as Tall King - fitted to Victor & Vulcan
- Blue Dolphin {{Anchor|Blue Dolphin}} - Blue Jay Mk V for Sea Vixen - see Hawker Siddeley Red Top
- Blue Duck {{Anchor|Blue Duck}} - Anti-Submarine Warfare missile, entered service as Ikara
- Blue Envoy {{Anchor|Blue Envoy}} - surface-to-air missile to OR.1140, replaced Green Sparker as "Stage 2" SAM
- Blue Fox {{Anchor|Blue Fox}} - kiloton range nuclear weapon, later renamed Indigo Hammer - not to be confused with the later Blue Fox radar
- Blue Fox {{Anchor|Blue Fox}} - airborne radar
- Blue Jacket {{Anchor|Blue Jacket}} - ARI (Airborne Radio Installation) 5880 airborne Doppler navigation radar fitted to Hawker-Siddeley Buccaneer aircraft.
- Blue Jay {{Anchor|Blue Jay}} - air-to-air missile - entered service as de Havilland Firestreak
- Blue Joker {{Anchor|Blue Joker}} - balloon-borne Early Warning radar - a.k.a. AMES Type 87
- Blue Lagoon - Infra-red air-to-air detector.
- Blue Moon {{Anchor|Blue Moon}} - nuclear-armed cruise missile project, replaced by Blue Streak
- Blue Oak {{Anchor|Blue Oak}} - AWRE Atlas 2 super-computer used for simulation of nuclear explosions
- Blue Orchid - Marconi doppler navigation equipment for helicopters
- Blue Parrot {{Anchor|Blue Parrot}} - ARI 5930 I band automatic contour-following radar for Buccaneer - also known as AIRPASS II (AIRPASS=Airborne Interception Radar & Pilot's Attack Sight System)
- Blue Peacock {{Anchor|Blue Peacock}} - ten-kiloton nuclear land mine - also known as Blue Bunny and Brown Bunny; it used the Blue Danube physics package.
- Blue Ranger - Delivery of Blue Steel to Australia
- Blue Rapier {{Anchor|Blue Rapier}} - Red Rapier - missiles - see UB.109T
- Blue Riband {{Anchor|Blue Riband}} - large jamming-resistant radar. Cancelled 1958 and replaced by a smaller version as Blue Yeoman.
- Blue Rosette {{Anchor|Blue Rosette}} - short-case nuclear weapon bomb casing for reconnaissance bomber to spec R156T, including the Avro 730, Handley Page HP.100, English Electric P10, Vickers SP4 and others.
- Blue Saga {{Anchor|Blue Saga}} - ARI 18105 airborne radar warning receiver (RWR) - fitted to Victor & Vulcan
- Blue Sapphire {{Anchor|Blue Sapphire}} - astro-navigation system - see also Orange Tartan
- Blue Shadow - navigation equipment for Canberra B.16, developed as Yellow Aster.
- Blue Shield - see Armstrong Whitworth Sea Slug
- Blue Silk {{Anchor|Blue Silk}} - airborne Doppler navigation radar unit with lower speed range than Green Satin
- Blue Sky {{Anchor|Blue Sky}} - see Fairey Fireflash
- Blue Slug {{Anchor|Blue Slug}} - heavy ship-to-ship missile using Sea Slug launcher, nuclear or conventional
- Blue Star {{Anchor|Blue Star}} - satellite launcher - see Black Prince
- Blue Steel {{Anchor|Blue Steel}} - an air-launched rocket propelled nuclear stand-off missile
- Blue Stone {{Anchor|Blue Stone}} - Unit 386D ENI (Electronic Neutron Initiator) - nuclear weapon component
- Blue Streak {{Anchor|Blue Streak}} - a medium-range ballistic missile
- Blue Study {{Anchor|Blue Study}} - automatic blind bombing system for V-bombers
- Blue Sugar {{Anchor|Blue Sugar}} - air-droppable target marking radio beacon developed by TRE.[5]
- Blue Vesta {{Anchor|Blue Vesta}} - a later version of the Blue Jay air-to-air missile
- Blue Vixen {{Anchor|Blue Vixen}} - Pulse-Doppler radar for Sea Harrier FA2
- Blue Warrior (EW) VHF/UHF Jammer countermeasure to use of Radar AA Shells
- Blue Water {{Anchor|Blue Water}} - see Red Rose
- Blue Yeoman {{Anchor|Blue Yeoman}} - Early Warning radar, also known as AMES Type 85, a component Linesman. Name created from the "Blue" of Blue Riband and the Yeoman of Orange Yeoman. Potentially non-official name.
Brown- Brown Bunny {{Anchor|Brown Bunny}} - original, unofficial name for Blue Peacock
Green- Green Apple - related to Window for measuring drift at sea
- Green Archer {{Anchor|Green Archer}} - mortar-locating radar
- Green Bamboo {{Anchor|Green Bamboo}} - nuclear weapon[6]
- Green Bottle - 1944 device for homing on U-boat radio signals (ARI.5574)
- Green Cheese {{Anchor|Green Cheese}} - nuclear anti-ship missile[7]
- Green Flash {{Anchor|Green Flash}} - Green Cheese’s replacement
- Green Flax {{Anchor|Green Flax}} - Surface-to-Air Guided Weapon (SAGW) or surface-to-air missile (SAM); see Yellow Temple
- Green Garland {{Anchor|Green Garland}} - infrared proximity fuze for Red Top
- Green Garlic {{Anchor|Green Garlic}} - Early Warning radar, also known as the AMES Type 80
- Green Ginger {{Anchor|Green Ginger}} - surveillance radars - combined installation of AMES Type 88 and AMES Type 89
- Green Granite {{Anchor|Green Granite}} - thermonuclear warheads: Green Granite (small), and Green Granite (large), both tested at Operation Grapple
- Green Grass {{Anchor|Green Grass}} - nuclear warhead for Violet Club and Yellow Sun Mark 1 bombs
- Green Hammock {{Anchor|Green Hammock}} - low-altitude bomber, Doppler navigation
- Green Janet {{Anchor|Green Janet}} - portable, nuclear power plant; see Blue Bishop
- Green Light {{Anchor|Green Light}} - SAGW or SAM - see Short Sea Cat[8]
- Green Lizard {{Anchor|Green Lizard}} - tube-launched SAM with variable geometry wings
- Green Mace {{Anchor|Green Mace}} - 5-inch rapid firing anti-aircraft gun[9]
- Green Minnow - Radiometer imager
- Green Palm {{Anchor|Green Palm}} - airborne VHF voice channel jammer with four pre-set channels, replaced in the Vulcan B2 by the I band jammer
- Green Salad - Wide-band VHF Homing equipment for the Avro Shackleton.
- Green Satin {{Anchor|Green Satin}} - airborne Doppler navigation radar unit
- Green Sparkler {{Anchor|Green Sparkler}} - advanced SAM for the "Stage 2" program, became Blue Envoy
- Green Thistle - Infra-red homing
- Green Walnut {{Anchor|Green Walnut}} - blind bombing equipment
- Green Water {{Anchor|Green Water}} - pilotless interceptor/SAGW
- Green Willow {{Anchor|Green Willow}} - EKCO AI Mk. 20 Fire Control radar, backup to ARI.5897 AI Mk. 23 Airborne Interception radar for the English Electric P.1 fighter
- Green Wizard {{Anchor|Green Wizard}} - instrument for calibrating anti-aircraft guns by measuring their muzzle velocity
Indigo- Indigo Bracket {{Anchor|Indigo Bracket}} - radar jamming system
- Indigo Corkscrew {{Anchor|Indigo Corkscrew}} - continuous wave radar, used with the Bristol Bloodhound and English Electric Thunderbird SAMs
- Indigo Hammer, formerly Blue Fox {{Anchor|Indigo Hammer}} - nuclear weapon
Jade- Jade River {{Anchor|Jade River}} - continuous wave radar, developed from Indigo Corkscrew
Orange- Orange Blossom - Pod-mounted electronic support measures used on the Hercules.
- Orange Cocktail - Experimental homing radar weapon from 1950s
- Orange Crop {{Anchor|Orange Crop}} - Racal MIR 2 ESM system for Royal Navy Lynx helicopters and some Royal Air Force Hercules aircraft.
- Orange Harvest {{Anchor|Orange Harvest}} - S and X band warning receiver fitted to Shackletons
- Orange Herald {{Anchor|Orange Herald}} - nuclear weapon
- Orange Nell {{Anchor|Orange Nell}} - SAGW - surface-to-air missile
- Orange Pippin {{Anchor|Orange Pippin}} - Ferranti, anti-aircraft, fire-control radar
- Orange Poodle {{Anchor|Orange Poodle}} - low altitude, OTHR (Over-the-Horizon) early-warning radar - abandoned
- Orange Putter {{Anchor|Orange Putter}} - Tail Warning radar fitted to Canberra and Valiant
- Orange Reaper {{Anchor|Orange Reaper}} - Electronic Support Measures system for Royal Navy Merlin helicopters
- Orange Tartan {{Anchor|Orange Tartan}} - 'Auto-Astro' automated star navigation system (day) - see also Blue Sapphire (night).[10]
- Orange Toffee - radar for Blue Envoy
- Orange William {{Anchor|Orange William}} - Swingfire, anti-tank missile
- Orange Yeoman {{Anchor|Orange Yeoman}} - Early Warning radar & guidance for Bristol Bloodhound SAGW - a.k.a. AMES Type 82
Pink- Pink Hawk {{Anchor|Pink Hawk}} - early name for Fairey Fireflash missile. As this was a "reduced" version of the Red Hawk, it is a rare example of Rainbow Codes having some implied meaning, rather than their usual purely deliberately meaningless choice.
Purple- Purple Granite {{Anchor|Purple Granite}} - nuclear weapon - see Green Granite
- Purple Passion {{Anchor|Purple Passion}} - Sub-kiloton demolition mine project related to Violet Mist.
- Purple Possum {{Anchor|Purple Possum}} - VX Nerve Agent.
Red- Red Angel {{Anchor|Red Angel}} - air-launched anti-ship weapon or "special bomb"[11]
- Red Beard {{Anchor|Red Beard}} - nuclear weapon
- Red Brick - Experimental continuous-wave target illuminating radar
- Red Cabbage - Naval radar[12]
- Red Carpet - X-band radar jammer[12]
- Red Cat {{Anchor|Red Cat}} - Air-launched nuclear stand-off missile cancelled 11/54.[12]
- Red Cheeks {{Anchor|Red Cheeks}} - inertially guided bomb[12] based on the work of Tubby Vielle
- Red Dean {{Anchor|Red Dean}} - large air-to-air missile
- Red Drover {{Anchor|Red Drover}} - airborne radar - see Avro 730
- Red Duster {{Anchor|Red Duster}} - Bristol Bloodhound surface-to-air missile
- Red Eye - An American general-purpose infra-red homing missile{{Citation needed|date=November 2018|reason=was this the FIM-43 Redeye, rather than a UK codename proper?}}
- Red Flag {{Anchor|Red Flag}} - free-fall nuclear bomb - 'Improved Kiloton Bomb' - WE.177
- Red Flannel {{Anchor|Red Flannel}} - experimental Q band H2S
- Red Garter - Tail warning radar for the Vulcan, did not enter service
- Red Hawk {{Anchor|Red Hawk}} - large missile "downrated" to give Blue Sky
- Red Heathen{{Anchor|Red Heathen}} - early SAM project, became Red Shoes and Red Duster[13]
- Red Hebe {{Anchor|Red Hebe}} - air-to-air missile, a replacement for Red Dean
- Red Light (ECM) {{Anchor|Red Light}} - X band jammer for V Bombers, entered service as ARI 18146
- Red King {{Anchor|Red King}} - two-barrel revolver cannon, later developed into single-barrel Red Queen
- Red Neck {{Anchor|Red Neck}} - airborne side-looking radar (SLAR), tested on the Victor a 40 foot long aerial under each wing. Flexing in flight corrupted the resolution. Cancelled 1962.[14]
- Red Queen {{Anchor|Red Queen}} - rapid fire 42 mm revolver cannon anti-aircraft gun[15][16]
- Red Rapier {{Anchor|Red Rapier}}, Blue Rapier missiles - see UB.109T
- Red Rose {{Anchor|Red Rose}} - short-range, battlefield nuclear missile for the British Army - English Electric - later known as Blue Water; cancelled 1962
- Red Sea (AA) {{Anchor|Red Sea}} - the AA predictor designed for use with the Green Mace automatic AA gun[17]
- Red Setter {{Anchor|Red Setter}} - experimental side-looking radar for V bombers
- Red Shoes {{Anchor|Red Shoes}} - see English Electric Thunderbird
- Red Shrimp {{Anchor|Red Shrimp}} - ARI 18076 airborne high-band jammer fitted to Victor & Vulcan
- Red Snow {{Anchor|Red Snow}} - nuclear weapon physics package - fitted to Yellow Sun Mk2 and Blue Steel
- Red Steer {{Anchor|Red Steer}} - EKCO ARI 5919/ARI 5952 airborne tail warning radar - development of AI 20 Green Willow - fitted to Victor & Vulcan
- Red Ticket {{Anchor|Red Ticket}} - associated with AI 17 radar
- Red Top {{Anchor|Red Top}} - air-to-air missile also known as Firestreak Mk 4
- Red Tulip {{Anchor|Red Tulip}} - phase coherent radar Moving Target Indicator (MTI)
Violet- Violet Banner {{Anchor|Violet Banner}} - infrared seeker for Red Top
- Violet Club {{Anchor|Violet Club}} - nuclear weapon
- Violet Friend {{Anchor|Violet Friend}} - simple ABM system ordered under AST.1135.
- Violet Mist {{Anchor|Violet Mist}} - truck-mounted nuclear land mine - formerly Blue Badger. Used the Red Beard physics package.
- Violet Picture {{Anchor|Violet Picture}} - UHF Homer, built by Plessey - Fitted to many RAF aircraft.[18]
- Violet Vision {{Anchor|Violet Vision}} - nuclear warhead for Corporal missile - based on Red Beard
Yellow- Yellow Anvil {{Anchor|Yellow Anvil}} - nuclear artillery shell warhead
- Yellow Aster {{Anchor|Yellow Aster}} - H2S Mk 9A bombing radar, fitted to Victor and Valiant aircraft
- Yellow Barley {{Anchor|Yellow Barley}} - radar warning receiver
- Yellow Duckling {{Anchor|Yellow Duckling}} - infra-red submarine detector
- Yellow Gate {{Anchor|Yellow Gate}} - Loral ESM for E-3D Sentry and Nimrod MR.2
- Yellow Jack {{Anchor|Yellow Jack}} - Orange Pippin's radar component
- Yellow Lemon {{Anchor|Yellow Lemon}} - Doppler-navigation system for naval aircraft
- Yellow River {{Anchor|Yellow River}} - mobile tactical control radar for Bristol Bloodhound - a.k.a. AMES Type 83
- Yellow Sand {{Anchor|Yellow Sand}} - anti-ship missile, possibly a precursor to Green Cheese
- Yellow Sun {{Anchor|Yellow Sun}} - nuclear weapon casing
- Yellow Temple {{Anchor|Yellow Temple}} - nuclear-armed SAGW development of Red Shoes
- Yellow Tiger {{Anchor|Yellow Tiger}} - Target illuminating radar used with the Thunderbird missile.
- Yellow Veil - ALQ-167 pod for Royal Navy Lynx.
Non-Rainbow codesSeveral British military related terms have a similar "colour" format to Rainbow Codes, but are not since they do not refer to classified research projects, and some names have been used unofficially. These include: - Black Banana - unofficial nickname for the Blackburn Buccaneer, originally named the Blackburn ANA (Blackburn Advanced Naval Aircraft).
- Blue Circle - sardonic name for concrete ballast for Buccaneer while awaiting Blue Parrot radar. Also used for Sea Harrier ballast in place of Blue Fox radar, and Tornado F.2 ballast. From the Blue Circle cement company.
- Blue Eric - improvised I band ECM jammer against the Fledermaus gun control radar during the Falklands War. Installed in the Harrier GR.3's starboard 30mm gun pod.[19][20]
- Blue Yeoman - unofficial name for an experimental radar made from components of the Blue Riband and Orange Yeoman
- Green Goddess {{Anchor|Green Goddess}} - colloquial name for Civil Defence fire pump
- Green Meat - a 'spoof' SAM programme reported in the 1976 RAF Yearbook[21]
- Green Parrot - unconfirmed low yield nuclear weapon mentioned in a 1981 New Statesman article by Duncan Campbell[22] who later claimed that it was "probably" a copy of the US B57 nuclear bomb.[23] The WE.177 has incorrectly been referred to as the Green Parrot by some authors. However Green Parrot was a NATO codename for the Soviet PFM-1 anti-infantry mine. Green Parrot was also the term for an admiral's barge, traditionally with a green-painted hull.
- Green Porridge {{Anchor|Green Porridge}} - RAF aircrew nickname for green-tinted H2S bombing radar display PPI image in Valiant, Victor & Vulcan
- Red Arrows {{Anchor|Red Arrows}} - RAF display team
- Red Devils {{Anchor|Red Devils}} - Parachute Regiment display team
- Red Slab - joke name for a large ballast weight replacing the nose radar in Avro Vulcan XH558 in its return to flight as a civil display aircraft.
- Violet Fire {{Anchor|Violet Fire}} - Ultraviolet light fire detection system for Concorde engine bays.[24]
- Yellow Hammer (also Yellowhammer): The contingency plans for a no-deal Brexit
See also{{Portal|Cold War}}- British military aircraft designation systems
- Nuclear weapons and the United Kingdom
- Rainbow Herbicides
References- Notes
1. ^{{cite book |title=Most Secret War |last=Jones |first=R |authorlink=Reginald Victor Jones |year=1978 |publisher=Hamish Hamilton Ltd. |location=London |isbn=0-241-89746-7 |page=120}} 2. ^{{cite web | publisher = Jane's Avionics | title = Blue Vixen radar (United Kingdom), AIRBORNE RADAR SYSTEMS | url=http://www.janes.com/articles/Janes-Avionics/Blue-Vixen-radar-United-Kingdom.html | accessdate = 2009-08-08 }} 3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/blueboar.htm |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2012-09-15 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120411022540/http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/blueboar.htm |archivedate=11 April 2012 |df=dmy }} 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.aeroflight.co.uk/reviews/books/review7.htm |title=Aviation Book Review |website=Aeroflight.co.uk |date= |accessdate=2016-07-25}} 5. ^{{cite web|author= |url=http://www.crecy.co.uk/product_info.php?products_id=573 |title=Vulcan’s Hammer |website=Crecy.co.uk |date= |accessdate=2016-07-25}} 6. ^PRO. AVIA 65/1193 E10A. Tech Note GW375 p.2 7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/greencheese.htm |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2005-11-07 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20050911102227/http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/greencheese.htm |archivedate=11 September 2005 |df=dmy }} 8. ^Cullen, Tony & Foss, Christopher F. (1991) Jane’s Land-Based Air Defence 1990–91, Jane’s Information Group, London: {{ISBN|0-7106-0915-9}} 9. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/greenmace.htm |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2008-04-22 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080504021136/http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/greenmace.htm |archivedate=4 May 2008 |df=dmy }} 10. ^{{cite web|author=Crecy Publishing Ltd |url=http://www.crecy.co.uk/product_info.php?products_id=573 |title=Vulcan’s Hammer |website=Crecy.co.uk |date= |accessdate=2016-07-25}} 11. ^British Secret Projects: Jet Bombers Since 1949 Tony Buttler Midland Publishing 2003 12. ^1 2 3 {{cite web|url=http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/start.htm |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2012-09-28 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20121024123107/http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/start.htm |archivedate=24 October 2012 |df=dmy }} 13. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1959/1959%20-%202460.html |title=1959 | 2460 | Flight Archive |website=Flightglobal.com |date=1959-09-25 |accessdate=2016-07-25}} 14. ^The Handley Page Victor, Roger R Brooks, 2007, Pen & Sword Books Limited, {{ISBN|978 1 84415 411 1}} p.197 15. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.quarryhs.co.uk/RED%20QUEEN.htm |title=THE RED QUEEN AND THE VIGILANTE |website=Quarryhs.co.uk |date=13 May 2011 |author=Anthony G Williams |accessdate= 20 November 2018}} 16. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/redqueen.htm |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2008-10-30 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081008013132/http://www.skomer.u-net.com/projects/redqueen.htm |archivedate=8 October 2008 |df=dmy }} 17. ^Jobson P. (2008) Royal Artillery Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations, The History Press, Stroud: 316 pp. 18. ^{{cite web |title=Airborne DF has existed for over 50 years. |url=http://www.pprune.org/private-flying/428119-adf-can-tell-you-where-elt-coming-2.html#post5950039 |date=22 September 2010 |publisher=PPRuNe - Professional Pilots Rumour Network}} 19. ^{{cite web |title=Falklands 25 |website=Fast Air Photography |url=http://www.fast-air.co.uk/falklands-25/}} 20. ^{{Cite book |title=Hostile Skies |last=Morgan |first=David |publisher=Hachette |year=2012 |isbn=1780225008 |page=165}} 21. ^{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Royal_Air_Force_Yearbook_1976.html?id=htOKQwAACAAJ&redir_esc=y |title=Royal Air Force Yearbook 1976 |website=Books.google.co.uk |date= |accessdate=2016-07-25}} 22. ^{{cite news|title=The Wings of the Green Parrot|last=Campbell|first=Duncan|publisher=New Statesman|page=9|date=17 April 1981}} 23. ^{{cite book|title=The Unsinkable Aircraft Carrier: American Military Power in Britain|page=104|author=Duncan Campbell|publisher=Paladin Grafton Books|year=1986|isbn=}} 24. ^{{Cite journal |title=Concorde Power Plant Fire Protection System |journal=Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology |last=Davis |first=R.A. |year=1993 |volume=43 |issue=5 |pages=26–30}}
- Bibliography
- Public Record Office, London. TNA AIR 2/17322 E51B (a)
- [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Vulcans-Hammer-V-Force-Aircraft-Projects/dp/1902109171 Vulcan's Hammer: V-Force Aircraft and Weapons Projects Since 1945] - Chris Gibson - 2011 - {{ISBN|978-1-902109-17-6}}
External links- [https://web.archive.org/web/20120314120957/http://www.mcis.soton.ac.uk/Site_Files/pdf/nuclear_history/glossary.pdf British nuclear weapon history]
{{UKColdWarProjects}}{{DEFAULTSORT:List Of Rainbow Codes}} 3 : Cold War military equipment of the United Kingdom|Code names|United Kingdom defence procurement |