Engineering:Micropower impulse radar
From HandWiki
Micropower impulse radar is a low-power ultra wideband radar developed in the mid-1990s[1] at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, used for sensing and measuring distances to objects in proximity to each other.
Commercial applications include:
- Vehicles: parking assistance, backup warnings, pre-collision detection and smart cruise control (measures the distance to the vehicles in front of you and if they get too close, throttle is released and brakes are applied).
- Appliances: studfinders and laser tape measures.
- Security: home intrusion motion sensors and perimeter surveillance.
- Search and rescue: micropower impulse radar can detect the beating of a human heart or respiration from long distances.
External links
- "LLNL Engineering Micropower Impulse Radar Search and Rescue". LLNL Industrial Partnering and Technology Transfer Process. October 3, 2006. Archived from the original on 2007-02-11. https://web.archive.org/web/20070211204252/http://www-eng.llnl.gov/mir/mir_search_rescue.html.
- "Micropower Impulse Radar (MIR)". LLNL Industrial Partnerships Office. https://ipo.llnl.gov/technologies/micropower_impulse_radar.
- ↑ Science & Technology Review January/February 1996 https://www.llnl.gov/str/pdfs/01_96.2.pdf
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micropower impulse radar.
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