The first to notice the anomaly on the bridge was the radar operator.
Human magicians had made considerable efforts to navigate in low-visibility environments, including attempts to use sound for positioning and environmental scanning, imitating bats and dolphins. However, humans, who rely on vision, ultimately find it challenging to imagine and understand a world perceived through sound waves. After detecting sound waves, it is necessary to perform conversions and mapping before translating it into intelligible visuals, a process that is time-consuming and of unsatisfactory precision. Blind people, on the other hand, can quickly grasp the information conveyed by sound, but translating these intuitive sensations into words that those with sight can understand remains an unresolved issue to this day. Even now, navigation in low-visibility conditions is still considered an absolute taboo.
With radar, the situation was entirely different.