Communication Moon Relay grew out of many ideas and concepts in radio espionage. Some impetus for the project was provided by post-
World War II efforts to develop methods of tracking radio signals, particularly those originating in
Eastern Europe and the
Soviet Union. Other sources included earlier proposals to use the Moon as a radio wave reflector, which date back to 1928. The first proof of this concept was the
Project Diana program of the
U.S. Army Signal Corps in 1946, which detected
radar waves bounced off the Moon. This attracted the attention of
Donald Menzel. Menzell was a staff member of the
Harvard College Observatory and a former
United States Navy Reserve commander, who proposed that the Navy undertake a program to use the Moon as a secure communications satellite. Prior to the Moon Relay project, long distance wireless communication around the curve of the Earth was conducted by
skywave ("skip") transmission, in which radio waves are refracted by the Earth's
ionosphere, which was sometimes disrupted by
solar flares and
geomagnetic storms. Before artificial satellites, the Moon provided the only reliable celestial object from which to reflect radio waves to communicate between points on opposite sides of the Earth. The developments in Moon circuit communications eventually came to the attention of
James Trexler, a radio
engineer at the Naval Research Laboratory. His interest was piqued by a paper published by researchers at an
ITT laboratory. Trexler developed plans for a system designed to intercept Soviet radar signals by detecting the transmissions that bounced off the Moon. This program, codenamed "Joe," began making regular observations in August 1949. Within a year, "Joe" was made an official Navy intelligence program, the
Passive Moon Relay (PAMOR). In September 1950, a new
parabolic antenna for the PAMOR project was completed at
Stump Neck, Maryland. The first tests of this antenna were impressive; the returning signal was of much higher
fidelity than expected. This presented the possibility of using a Moon circuit as a communications circuit. Unfortunately for PAMOR, collecting Soviet radar signals would require a larger antenna. Efforts began to have such an antenna constructed at
Sugar Grove, West Virginia. ==Development==