- Józef Kosacki
Józef Stanisław Kosacki (1909–1990) was a Polish engineer, inventor, and an officer in the
Polish Army duringWorld War II . He is best known as the inventor of thePolish mine detector , the first man-portablemine detector , whose basic design has been in use with various armies for over 50 years.Life
Before
World War II , Kosacki was a technician in the Artillery Department of the Polish Ministry of National Defense. Shortly before the war, he joined the clandestine Special Signals Unit, a secret institute that worked on electronic appliances for the army. Following the 1939 invasion of Poland, he managed to get to theUnited Kingdom , where he continued his service in thePolish Army as a signals officer. In 1941 he devised hisPolish Mine Detector , which was used until the 1991Gulf War .After the war he returned to Poland, where he became a pioneer of electronics and nuclear machinery. For many years he held the chair in electronics at the Institute for Nuclear Research at
Świerk . He was also a professor at the Military Technical Academy inWarsaw . He died in 1990 and was buried with military honors.Legacy
In 2005 the
Wrocław -based Military Institute for Engineering Technology ("WITI") was named for him. This Institute has the first prototypePolish mine detector built by Kosacki.Name
During
World War II , Kosacki's name was classified in order to protect his family, which had remained behind in German-held Poland. Therefore most of his patents were submitted underpseudonym s, including "Józef Kos," "Kozacki" and "Kozak." As a result, hissurname is often given erroneously in postwar historiography.ee also
*List of Poles
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