Military Device Will Sense Through Concrete Walls 325
Juha-Matti Laurio writes "DefenseLINK News is reporting that 'troops conducting urban operations soon will have the capabilities of superheroes, being able to sense through 12 inches of concrete to determine if someone is inside a building.' By simply holding the portable, handheld device named a "Radar Scope" up to a wall, users will be able to detect movements as small as breathing. The Radar Scope hopes to eventually give troops the ability to see up to 50 feet beyond a concrete wall to decrease losses in urban combat."
Watch put for the false ceilings... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Watch put for the false ceilings... (Score:5, Funny)
Urban rescue? (Score:4, Insightful)
Wrong. DARPA would love that. (Score:5, Insightful)
Keep in mind, the eggheads at DARPA (they paid me once, too) would love nothing better than to actually tell their families what they do for a living.
Imagine something like the quakes in Turkey or Iran, and they could find survivors from under the concrete slabs. Kids could point to the TV and say "my daddy made that!"
Don't confuse politicians with individuals.
Re:Wrong. DARPA would love that. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:2)
Wont let? How are they going to stop people from building their own? Many of the DIY project people will be building these as the specific details become more available - that is no
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:2)
The military does its own thing, and loves it when its projects find some other use too, since it's good publicity and whatnot.
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, and I'd bet those terrorists would just latch onto that DARPA thing they called the "entarnet" or something like that. Too bad we'll never get to use it.
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:2, Insightful)
Particularly striking is that you write about DARPA, whose forebear, ARPA, basically built the internet you're using.
No, they'll let US play with it, but you have to stay outside and scoop the cat poo out of the sandbox.
Re:Urban rescue? How about woodland creatures? (Score:2, Funny)
--
I type a different sig every time I comment on something. Here is my latest.
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:2)
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:2)
That seems like a big advantage to me. That means it's a lot faster to use, and there's less risk of tipping off the occupants. Also it's field-portable (if they can actually make it into a rugged handheld unit) and doesn't require all of the ancillary equipment that an endoscope / camera snake does.
In short, it's much more likely to actually be used by troops, and anything that reduces the number of hot entries that soldiers have to do is a good thi
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:5, Insightful)
More 'defense dividends'... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll add to that list; the automotive industry is full of them. First of all there's the night-vision cameras (arguably invented by the Germans pre WWII), radar parking aids, and heads-up displays.
At home you can cook using a microwave oven (invented by a researcher at Raytheon), which probably itself uses a Liquid Crystal Display (much of the development of which was done at the UK Radar Research Establishment at Malvern, formerly the Army Radar Establishment). Or maybe you'd like to listen to some music on a set of flat-panel loudspeakers (offshoot of research done by the British DERA into quiet 'stealth' helicopters).
A list like this could go on practically forever; in fact it's hard to find a product -- any product -- which hasn't been touched by military R&D at some point in its history. To be honest, dollar for dollar, I think it is quite possible that the American public (and other countries too, but particularly the U.S. because we consume so much technology) gets as much if not more out of the money spent on military research by contractors, than we do out of pure research at universities. Not to say that pure research doesn't have it's place, and is almost always inventive in nature, military research is usually directed and innovative, and produces useful devices in relatively short timescales.
Take a look around your home, unless you live on an Amish farm, you're probably surrounded by things, the initial development of which were paid for with defense dollars.
References:
http://www.achtungpanzer.com/ir.htm [achtungpanzer.com] Infrared and Night Vision Scopes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_crystal_displ
http://www.mod.uk/issues/diversification/diversif
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:2)
This sounds like there is the
Re:Urban rescue? (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually it was Rush Limbaugh that killed the project. Him, Bill O'Reilly, and Sean Hannity were outraged that the liberals wanted to use this new technology to fight the terrorists, which Rush, Sean & Bill were secretly aiding through covert operations behind 12-inch thick concrete walls. They couldn't risk the liberals gaining evidence of such activity, so they killed the project.
My sources are as valid as y
Terahertz Imaging (Score:5, Informative)
Once the transmission technology comes down in price it's going to be great for the 'metal detecting' hobbyists. No more digging up rubbish. You'll be able to see the object. This is one technology that I cant wait for!
Not good for concrete (Score:2)
Re:Terahertz Imaging (Score:3, Funny)
Is the point of treasure detecting to spend as much time as possible looking for treasure, or to find as much treasure as possible in a given amount of time?
WALLHACK! (Score:5, Funny)
*kicked from international conflict*
MOD PARENT UP. (Score:2)
Re:WALLHACK! (Score:2)
Nice try... (Score:2, Funny)
Older... (Score:5, Funny)
(someone had to say it)
Re:Older... (Score:2)
Military use? (Score:2, Funny)
If Nintendo couldn't do it... (Score:2)
I call prior art (Score:5, Funny)
Oblig. 5th Element (Score:2)
I'm practicing giving my walls the finger right now.
Re:Oblig. 5th Element (Score:2)
Sad (Score:3, Interesting)
This spells the end for revolutions, for insurgents, freedom fighters whatever you want to call them.
This is the final nail in the coffin of home made firearms against your government.
Oppressive governments rejoice!
Re:Sad (Score:2, Insightful)
Sad?
So you are sad for the romantic freedom fighters [wikipedia.org], but not for happy rescue workers [alertnet.org]?
Good idea, lets stop helpful technological advances in order not to let the evil government agents look through walls.
Re:Sad (Score:3, Insightful)
How will this device stop a car full of exlosives ready to be detonated by distance? Roadside bombs? Suicidie bombers? A suicide bomber with a car full of explosives will drive his van to a checkpoint and blow it up. No need to see if "someone is hidden". Or when a bomber walks into a crowded place, same thing. And roadside bombs or mines are pretty much safe from this device.
Also let's suppose the US is doi
Re:Sad (Score:2)
It's going to be great over the next 20 years as America applies the lessons on how to defeat the Iraqis and the crazy honorless killers. We always learn.
Those guys rock.
Anti-Industrialist Rhetoric (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Anti-Industrialist Rhetoric (Score:2)
You're assuming that the politicians can't get unquestioning machinery to work for them and get things done instead. At some point, they could even have machinery to fix and maintain the machinery, at which point those messy subordinate humans can be cut out of the loop entirely.
Yea
Re:Anti-Industrialist Rhetoric (Score:2)
Well chances are if they don't teach the machines morals, then one day the machines won't have any qualms turning on its masters. Then again, if synthetic life did away with all politicians, would that really be a bad thing?
Re:Sad (Score:3, Funny)
Creepy (Score:2)
Troll, or flamebait? So hard to choose... (Score:2, Insightful)
I'll prob
Re:Sad (Score:2)
And in other countries.... freedom fighters rarely hang out near the local police station. If the army (which is what is generally chasing them) can get close enough to use imaging technologies to look for hidden weapons, they are already close enough to shoot them.
Re:Sad (Score:2)
But since the 1960s and 70s, terrorists have found that murderous brutality against women, children, and civilians in general gets them so much more publicity, they've gone that route.
I may have disagreed with the mid-20th Century IRA, or the comoros, or other earlier insurgencies, but back when they attacked only soldiers and policemen it at least had a legitimate claim that its efforts were
Re:Sad (Score:2)
This is NOT an imaging device. It's a motion detector. Maybe on the other side of a wall is a room full of heavily-armed revolutionaries, or maybe it's a cat chasing a mouse.
Re:Sad (Score:2)
excellent (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:excellent (Score:3)
If you're an American soldier on the ground, that just makes sure there's no one who's going to shoot you in the back when you move on.
Possible problems (Score:5, Interesting)
Seeing it from the point of view of a guerrilla fighter, now you would have an easy way of luring troops into your traps by simply putting a dog in the building. When the troops come, the booby trap explodes. Or better than a dog, use a man, seeing how low the own human life is regarded by some of the latests fighters-against-freedom groups.
It's perhaps just me but I'm a bit tired of this way of presenting technology as the key that will solve the problems of the military in guerrilla environments. Organization, training and motivation are in my humble point of view, much more important. But you cannot show them off so easily in a presentation, I suppose.
Re:Possible problems (Score:3, Insightful)
There are two ways a conventional army can win guerilla wars: by attacking the civilian population, or by staying out of guerilla wars.
Britain lost the American revolution to guerillas; America lost To Vietnam's Viet Cong; Soviet Russia (and decades before, Britain) lost to Afghan guerillas.
Nazi Germany managed to prevent major uprisings by being wil
Re:Possible problems (Score:2)
But how do you anticipate whether a guerilla war will precipitate in the first place? The Bush administration didn't anticipate the mess in Iraq, they thought we'd be greeted as liberators and delared "mission accomplished" after the victory in conventional warfare which was, as expected, "a cakewalk."
It would be tempting to conclude that you simply can't impose democr
Re:Possible problems (Score:3, Insightful)
That's because the Bush Administration made sure to fire the generals and experts who did anticipate the mess.
As Richard Clarke and others have made clear, the Bush Administration decided, immediately after 9/11, to go into Iraq. They weren't about to let facts get in the way of their "vision".
God save us from "visionary" leaders.
There are so many things the Bush administration "didn't anticipate" or got wrong, or mismanaged: warnings before 9/11,
Re:Possible problems (Score:5, Informative)
His father certainly did. Here's a quote [thememoryhole.org] George H. W. Bush, from back in 1991:
While we hoped that popular revolt or coup would topple Saddam, neither the U.S. nor the countries of the region wished to see the breakup of the Iraqi state. We were concerned about the long-term balance of power at the head of the Gulf. Trying to eliminate Saddam, extending the ground war into an occupation of Iraq, would have violated our guideline about not changing objectives in midstream, engaging in "mission creep," and would have incurred incalculable human and political costs. [...] Under those circumstances, furthermore, we had been self-consciously trying to set a pattern for handling aggression in the post-cold war world. Going in and occupying Iraq, thus unilaterally exceeding the U.N.'s mandate, would have destroyed the precedent of international response to aggression we hoped to establish. Had we gone the invasion route, the U.S. could conceivably still be an occupying power in a bitterly hostile land. It would have been a dramatically different--and perhaps barren--outcome.
Re:Possible problems (Score:2)
Re:Possible problems (Score:2)
Take this device, for example, it is just a device. On the other side, there is a human, a much more adaptive, thinking evolving "device". As soon as that human learns of this technology, he will find a way to counter it or even turn it against the user of the device.
Anti-terrorist measures cannot be technical or military. T
Re:Possible problems (Score:2)
Actually, the number of people dead is somewhere between 30,000 and 100,000. It's hard to know the exact number because the U.S. government doesn't keep a count of Iraqi casualties. The 2000+ figure refers to the deaths of American soldiers, which is tragic but only a small portion of the total loss of life (and of course as soldiers they were all volunteer combatants).
An ultrawideband through-wall imaging system (Score:5, Informative)
This is an ultrawideband through-wall imaging system, and is an old technology that has been around for many years. Two of the many manufacturers are Time Domain [Flash!] [timedomain.com] and Camero [camero-tech.com].
Note that, while military radio emissions are regulated in the U.S. by the NTIA [doc.gov], U.S. civilian use of ultrawideband through-wall imaging systems is controlled by the FCC (by regulations established in April 2002 [pdf!] [fcc.gov]). 47 U.S.C. 15.510(5)(e) [pdf!] [fcc.gov] states that
Basically, and as defined by rules elsewhere, it's illegal even to possess one in the U.S. if you're not a first-responder type.Re:An ultrawideband through-wall imaging system (Score:3, Informative)
I wasn't able to access the DefenseLink article for some reason (it came up blank in several browsers), but I thought I would make a couple of comments on UWB imaging.
These UWB based through wall imaging systems have been available, for example, in Japan for 20 years. They were banned in the US until after 9/11 because of political pressure from telco's (Biggest docket the FCC has ever seen).
At that time, they were allowed to the public(with great restrictions) as unlicensed spectrum device
Re:An ultrawideband through-wall imaging system (Score:2)
Re:An ultrawideband through-wall imaging system (Score:2)
I wonder how long plans for a primitive device make it out onto the Net - I'm reminded of the early Van Eck devices. Initially people thought they were science fiction or a joke....
obligatory (Score:4, Funny)
idclip (Score:2)
Damn (Score:2)
Let's just hope.. (Score:2, Funny)
Whose lives? (Score:2)
What about a little thing called Privacy? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What about a little thing called Privacy? (Score:2)
metalized wall paper and paints (Score:2)
how about they... (Score:2)
U.S. Military doesn't need this (Score:2)
Re:U.S. Military doesn't need this (Score:2)
Airstrikes and artillary are used AFTER confirmation of enemy in structures. If there were any truth to your insanely stupid comment, the number of allied soldiers injured in this war would be much reduced.
Here's a penny! Go buy a brain which is at least twice as good as the one you currently have.
resolution (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yeah but... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yeah but... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Yeah but... (Score:4, Funny)
You put it in your lap... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Curse the war as you want... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Curse the war as you want... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Curse the war as you want... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Curse the war as you want... (Score:2)
Re:Curse the war as you want... (Score:2)
Re:Curse the war as you want... (Score:2)
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:4, Interesting)
It is one of history's little ironies that later events have overclouded the fact that Benedict Arnold was one of the most brilliant leaders of guerilla warfare in history.
The capturing of Fort Ticonderoga in order to procure its cannon and how those cannon subsequently made their way to Boston. The Battle of Beemis Hights (I spent last night in the home of Gen. Philip Schyler who deployed Benedict in that action). Coming, literally, within yards of conquering Canada for America (and would have done so but for the lack of a pair of walkie-talkies).
Washington weren't half bad either. Why did he cross the Deleware (in secret, at night, in winter when such a move couldn't be expected)? To attack the endentured rear guard holding a barracks after the main army had marched out and then . .
America once stood as the object model for how guerilla fighters in a third world country could stand up to and prevail over a superpower (with a wee bit of help from . .
Not to mention its raison e'tre.
KFG
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:3, Interesting)
America recently tends to throw huge amounts of people and money at problems and sort out the results later. There usually is nothing refined or subtle about it.
They learned that in WW2 when they sent Shermans ("Tommycookers") against Panzers. Interviews with surviving Panther and Tiger crew members and commanders indicate that they couldn't beleive that a country as rich and powerful as America would field such bad tanks. ("You got 3? We'll make 20!")
I guess the American military has the last say now
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:2)
Once upon a time, Americans were very good at guerilla warfare. Just ask the British (sorry Britons) -- otherwise, we would still be English colonies. To paraphrase Bill Cosby, who put it so well in one of his routines, the American army could shoot from behind rocks and trees, and could wear any color they wanted to wear, while the British army had t
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:2)
I've perused this whole thread for some indication of *what* specifically US forces could be doing better, but I only find some ad-hoc BS about
Anti-american post is "insightful"? (Score:2)
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:2)
First of all, your statement is completely bogus. Americans employ the most highly trained and honed guerilla fighting teams...they are called the Rangers and Special Forces. They seem to have done an amazing job in Afganistan an
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:3, Interesting)
Ranger School and SF Q Course are two different beings, from what I've been told by people who have done both. Ranger School is physically demanding. SF Q Course is primarily mentally demanding, with enough physical demands thrown in to amplify any mental deficiencies. Forgetting the team's SAW at an ambush point
US troops not defeated in Vietnam or Somalia (Score:3, Insightful)
You have a consistent failing. You confuse the political with the miliary.
US troops were not defeated in Vietnam or Somalia. In Vietnam, Giap's seige of Khe San was a failure. Giap's Thet Offensive was also a failure. The Viet Cong guerilla force was virtually wiped out during Thet. The North Vietnamese were forced to
Re:US troops not defeated in Vietnam or Somalia (Score:2)
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:2)
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:2)
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:4, Informative)
Oh dear.
I guess we have to blame your teachers for this, "Sir Foxx".
In WWII, we Americans didn't destroy whole villages during occupation: the Germans did that.
German civilians put up very little resistance prior to Germany's surrender, and no real resistance after surrender. No car bombs (indeed, car bombs are really a more recent invention), little or no shooting of American occupiers.
Now, the Nazi Germans did carry out reprisals against civilians in occupied countries. Don't believe me: look up Lidice [historyplace.com] or Oradour-sur-Glane [scrapbookpages.com] and educate yourself.
When I was growing up (I'm guessing I'm a bit older than you), Americans took some pride in being the "good guys", pride in not being like the Nazis or the Soviets. We used to be proud that the rest of the world looked to America as an example of a free democracy. That was before we decided to export "democracy" by means of torture and secret prisons and Big Brother-ish spying.
That was before we became mirror images of the totalitarian regimes we had been so proud to fight against.
Like I said, I'm probably bit older than you, "Sir Foxx", and in some way, I guess, luckier, even though I didn't grow up with a computer in the house, much less a PSP or an iPod in my pocket. But I did grow up in an America that had principles. In an America that stood against torture and secret prisons and warrantless searches and unchecked government power. In an America that really was, in some true way, "the land of the free and the home of the brave".
America is no longer the "land of the free" and it's certainly not the "home of the brave". Again, I don't blame you "Sir Foxx", anymore than a Roman of the Republic would have blamed a child who grew up under Caesars for thinking Augustus really was a god.
But trust me, Americans used to be brave. Not your sort of brave, which is just the bravado of the scared bully, of the totalitarian state: "we can bomb you, we can make your life a living hell, unless you do what we say".
Americans used to be brave in that we were willing to die for the liberties our Founding Fathers risked their lives to give us. We were willing to fight and die to protect the right of any knucklehead to criticise the President, because we knew that sometimes the President is a knucklehead.
We used to be brave enough to risk getting on a train or plane without being treated like convicts or slaves or cattle, without being searched by blandly rude security guards.
We used to be brave enough to "Live Free or Die", to say "Give me Liberty or give me Death". Now we Americans piss our pants and beg to put up with any indignity, and loss of freedom, for a little security.
Nineteen hijackers didn't do this to us. Saddam didn't do this to us. Osama didn't do this to us. Yes, one terrible day Osama and his hijackers killed a bunch of Americans and shocked us all.
But it wasn't Osama who surrendered our liberty and our principles and our decency. We've done that all on our own.
Again, it's not your fault, "Sir Foxx". I blame your teachers. They never taught you what it really means to be an American.
Yeah, we can make Iraq, in your words "a living hell for everyone". And we're busy doing it right here at home too.
Re:Silly Americans Again (Score:2)
And, the object of a hammer is to pound nails.
But winning battles, and pounding nails, isn't a useful objective by itself. The war in Iraq is being run by a bunch of nitwits who think you can drop some lumber, nails, and carpenters off at a job site and come back six months later to a well-constructed house. Or, perhaps an apartment building, or garage, or a warehouse full of furniture. No-one is sure -- hopefully if we just start pounding
Guns are allowed in hotel rooms (Score:2)
Even if they could detect firearms, which I doubt, why would it matter? Nevada has extremely lax firearms regulations [packing.org]. I have never seen a hotel that had a posted policy against firearms; in fact I'm not even sure they can. Your hotel room is considered your residence and you have an inviolable
Re:Guns are allowed in hotel rooms (Score:2)
Re:Yes, but (Score:2)
Ignoring technology is bad too (Score:2)
Yes, however so it ignoring technology. More importantly, who said US troops will not train to conduct operations with and without the high tech equipment. Mechanical and electronic failures are an important part of current training. I don't see anyone indicating this is about to change.
Re:this is old news (Score:2)
Clancy based those devices (which were heartbeat sensors, if I recall correctly) on the DKL LifeGuard [pitt.edu], which Sandia Labs proved [sandia.gov] to be pretty much an expensive box of useless electronic components.