If they get this going, it would be great for them to keep track of where the Arabs are stockpiling their weapons and then destroy them.
Israeli tech to see through walls could aid in kidnap crisis
Camero-Techs system allows security personnel to peer into closed rooms, basements, or bunkers
BY DAVID SHAMAH June 22, 2014
The specific tactics and technology being used by the IDF to find three teens said kidnapped by Hamas are, of course, top secret. But its pretty likely that the army is making use of the technology developed by Israels Camero-Tech Ltd.
This technology can see through solid walls, providing soldiers with an inside view of closed rooms, bunkers, basements, and other redoubts where the kidnappers are possibly holding the Israelis.
Cameros through-the-wall imaging system uses ultra-wideband (UWB) radar to map the layout of an area that is blocked by brick, cinder blocks, rebar reinforced concrete, plaster drywall, wood, adobe, stone, and just about any other material as thick as a meter or more.
Read more:
Israeli tech to 'see' through walls could aid in kidnap crisis | The Times of Israel
Israeli tech to see through walls could aid in kidnap crisis
Camero-Techs system allows security personnel to peer into closed rooms, basements, or bunkers
BY DAVID SHAMAH June 22, 2014
The specific tactics and technology being used by the IDF to find three teens said kidnapped by Hamas are, of course, top secret. But its pretty likely that the army is making use of the technology developed by Israels Camero-Tech Ltd.
This technology can see through solid walls, providing soldiers with an inside view of closed rooms, bunkers, basements, and other redoubts where the kidnappers are possibly holding the Israelis.
Cameros through-the-wall imaging system uses ultra-wideband (UWB) radar to map the layout of an area that is blocked by brick, cinder blocks, rebar reinforced concrete, plaster drywall, wood, adobe, stone, and just about any other material as thick as a meter or more.
Read more:
Israeli tech to 'see' through walls could aid in kidnap crisis | The Times of Israel