COPS HAVE EYES ON X-RAY VISION
New Technology Would Let Police See Though Walls
June 4, 1999
By Hans H. Chen
NEW YORK (APBnews.com) -- After failing for 19 hours to flush an armed man high on methamphetamine from a Los Angeles warehouse, sheriff's deputies made the decision they always dread -- bust in and take him out.
They had no idea where in the cavernous facility Daniel Lawrence Collins had holed up, and no way to find out. They knew he would have the drop on the strike team, and they were right. Collins opened fire with an SKS assault rifle from behind a bathroom door, injuring three deputies.
What the deputies need -- and what they soon may get -- is X-ray vision.
A force multiplier
Three high-tech labs are in the final stages of developing a new form of radar device that can see through walls by broadcasting radio signals across broad bands of the spectrum to pinpoint a hidden suspect. Based on military technology, the products still need government approval and won't go on the market for at least a few more months.
But police who have tried various versions of the new radar scanners like what they see -- and what the product developers are telling them.
"One of the exciting things about this is that it's kind of like a force multiplier," said Elise Taylor, a spokeswoman for Time Domain, an Alabama company that developed a through-the-wall surveillance system called RadarVision. "It allows you to tell what's going on inside a building without actually having to look through a window or be inside the room."
See breathing through wood
Time Domain's product can detect breathing through wood, plaster or concrete from 20 feet away. By reading an LCD panel on the front of the chunky, 16-pound unit, police officers will know the exact location of their quarry.
"Especially with something that is as efficient as this in detecting motion behind a door or wall, the police definitely need something like that," said Jim Ball, a program manager for the National Institute of Justice's Office of Law Enforcement Technology Commercialization who is helping Time Domain bring the product to market. "It's high priority."
Time Domain has developed 20 prototypes and is still working on reducing the size of the unit, Ball said.
100-foot range
Time Domain isn't the only company working on X-ray vision for cops. After that June 11, 1997, standoff, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office started looking into the new technology and came across defense contractor Raytheon and its MARS system, or Motion and Ranging Sensor. The company promises MARS will spot a lurking fugitive 100 feet away. That kind of range -- achieved by adapting military missile guidance technology -- is enough to find someone hiding two stories up inside a building.
"If they're in the bushes, all they have to do is scratch their butt and you'll pick them up," said Larry Frazier, a Raytheon senior scientist who developed the MARS system.
SWAT teams from the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department and Albuquerque, N.M., Police Department have been working with demonstration models of the MARS system.
"This particular technology allows us to see through walls and has great promise because we can find where the suspect is and enter into an area where we're not going to be confronted by him," said Lt. Sid Heal, who researches new technology for the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department. "Sometimes it's as important to know where a suspect isn't as where he is."
Radar flashlight
Scientists at Georgia Tech are working on a third system -- a lightweight through-the-wall radar system that fits inside a flashlight. With a range of about 40 feet, Georgia Tech's "radar flashlight" displays less information than the other two devices. Initially developed so Army medics could tell if soldiers stranded on a battlefield were still breathing, the radar flashlight can detect, from certain angles, a human heartbeat, say its inventors.
When the radar flashlight detects a human movement, the display is simple -- as simple, perhaps, as two lights on top of the unit. A red light means there's someone there.
This simplicity has the advantage of being cheaper than the other systems. The MARS units are expected to cost $5,000 to $10,000. Time Domain doesn't disclose the cost of its device. At $500, the radar flashlight may be more practical for cash-strapped police departments.
"We're trying to reach every policeman on the beat," said Gene Greneker, the scientist at the Georgia Tech Research Institute who developed the radar flashlight. "Police departments don't have a lot of money for technology."
Federal approval required
Cost might not be the only thing keeping these technologies off the market. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which regulates all commercial radar, radio and television broadcasts, is holding up the technology because of concerns that the devices may interfere with existing radar transmissions.
Conventional radar bounces continuous waves of energy, at a fixed frequency, at a target. The Raytheon and Time Domain devices use something called ultra wide-band radar, sending out low-level bursts of energy across many frequencies. Because they carry such little power, the companies say the bursts cause minimal interference to other signals, but the FCC has yet to approve ultra wide-band transmissions.
Time Domain, Raytheon and other companies with a stake in this technology said they expected the FCC to make a decision by this summer. Time Domain said it would like to begin selling units this year. Time Domain founder Ralph Petroff told APBNews.com that he expected the federal government to grant his company a waiver soon that would allow it to distribute 2,500 of its devices to accredited public safety agencies.
Raytheon wants to have its products on the market by the beginning of next year.
The demand for these products is high, and the National Institute of Justice has placed through-the-wall surveillance at the top of its scientific funding priority list for the past two years. Law enforcement officials and the companies themselves say the need for the new products is obvious, and they may help police officers survive deadly situations.
"I think once they learn how to use it, it'll be as valuable as their
guns," Frazier said.
RADAR FLASHLIGHT FOR THROUGH-THE-WALL DETECTION OF HUMANS
Eugene F. Greneker
Radar Systems Division, Surface Systems Branch
Sensors and Electromagnetic Applications Laboratory
Georgia Tech Research Institute
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0856
Abstract:
Prior to the 1996 Olympics held in Atlanta, Georgia, several versions of a radar vital signs monitor (RVSM) were developed by Georgia Tech Research Institute researchers. The most recent version RVSM was developed to measure the heart rate of Olympic rifle and bow and arrow See related paper: RADAR Flashlight for Through-the-Wall Detection of Humans
competitors to determine if their training allowed them to the detect their heartbeats and if so, whether they were capable of using that training to avoid an approximate 5 milliradian movement of the bow or rifle that occurs each time the heart beats. The RVSM that was developed was tested to detect the shooter's heartbeat at a distance of 10 meters without the requirement of a physical connection to the subject. It was found that a second channel could be added to the RVSM to detect the shooter's respiration rate from a distance of 20 meters without physical connection between the RVSM and the shooter.
The RADAR Flashlight, a spin-off of these predecessor systems developed
at GTRI, is the topic of this paper. The RADAR Flashlight was designed
to detect the respiration of a human subject behind a wall, door or an
enclosed space with non-conductive walls. The use of the system as a foliage
penetration radar has also been explored. It has been determined that the
RADAR Flashlight is capable of detecting a human hiding within a tree line
behind light foliage. This paper describes the current status of the RADAR
Flashlight and presents typical test data produced when the system is operated
in the laboratory environment.
1. History of System Development:
The RADAR Flashlight results from technology developed during several
research projects conducted at GTRI over the past 10 years to detect respiration
and heartbeat signatures from individuals at a distance and without connections.
The first GTRI RVSM system was developed in the mid-1980s under sponsorship
of the United States Department of Defense (DOD). A patent on the system
was issued in 1992. This frequency modulated (FM) radar was used as a battlefield
vital signs monitor. It was designed to be used during live fire situations
to determine if a wounded soldier was alive before risking a corpsman's
life to treat him. The design goal of that system was a capability to detect
heartbeat and respiration at distances of 100 meters. The system was also
tested on soldiers wearing a chemical or biological warfare suit to allow
vital signs to be monitored without opening the suit and risking contamination
of the subject. The latest RVSM, to be briefly discussed in this paper,
was developed by the author for use in the 1996 Olympics held in Atlanta,
Georgia. A variant called the RADAR Flashlight, which is the primary subject
of this paper, was developed for use by law enforcement personnel to detect
individuals concealed behind a wall or within an enclosed space.
2. The RVSM Developed for Olympic Application:
The operation of the Olympic model RVSM was addressed in a paper that
was presented at AeroSense 97.1 Specifically, the RVSM was developed because
it had been proposed that some Olympic archers and rifle competitors shoot
between their heartbeats to avoid an approximate 5 milliradian movement
of the arms and body. If this was true, their shooting between heartbeats
would provide better accuracy. A system to detect a heartbeat at a distance
was proposed and a prototype RVSM was built to demonstrate the finely honed
skills of the Olympic competitors. It was envisioned that the demonstration
RVSM would be of interest to the television networks covering these competitions.
Next, several system requirements were developed. The operation of the
system could not distract the competitors. To meet this challenge, the
radar was designed to be located at least 10 meters from the competitors,
under a radome, and mounted on a pan-tilt positioner. A charged coupled
low light level television camera was boresighted with the antenna for
aiming the system at the thorax of the shooters under study. The system
also required low sidelobes to avoid detection motion artifacts from the
event judges who would observe the shooters during competition.
3. Radar Vital Signs Heartbeat Signature:
Figure 1 shows the a typical heartbeat signature that has been sensed
by the RVSM built for the Olympics. Referring to Figure 1, the subject
was seated in the laboratory approximately 3 meters from the RVSM. The
RVSM antenna was boresighted on the thorax region of the subject's chest.
It is thought that the signature that is detected by the RVSM is the shock wave propagating from the beating heart as it spreads across the thorax region of the chest wall rather than the detection of the movement of the beating heart. Studies have shown that there is little penetration of the chest wall by radio frequency (RF) energy at 24.1 GHz at the low power densities of 0.1 milliwatt/CM2, which is typical of those produced by the RVSM at a range of 3 meters. It is thought that this shock wave is the same phenomenon that is heard by a health care provider using a stethoscope. The heartbeat signature shown in Figure 1 is relatively complex, indicating that there are numerous frequencies in the signature. When the digital recording from which the Figure 1 plot was taken is fed into a digital to analog converter and the subsequent output is fed to the input of an audio amplifier with good bass response, the sound that is heard in the speaker is very similar to the heartbeat sounds that are heard with a stethoscope.
The capability of the RVSM to provide heart and respiration rate in addition to heart sounds suggests some interesting applications for the technology. These possible applications include a monitor for telemedicine that does not require the connection of electrodes to the patient. Physically or mentally challenged patients would only be required to sit in front of a table top monitor to have their heart and respiration rates taken. Burn wards could use the system to take vital signs of patients without skin for electrode attachment.
Other applications that have been investigated for the RVSM include using it to detect persons hiding in light foliage several feet behind a chain link fence. The use of the RVSM as a stress measurement system has also been investigated. It was found that a change in the heartbeat rate of a human as small as 3 heartbeats per minute is measurable. This capability has law enforcement applications. It was during the evaluation of law enforcement applications that the concept of the RADAR Flashlight was developed.
The RADAR Flashlight was developed to be a law enforcement tool. It can detect the respiration signature of an individual standing up to 5 meters behind an 20 centimeter hollow core concrete block wall and wooden doors typical of those found on most homes and which are almost transparent to the system. Dry plywood, particle board and wall board do not attenuate the signal significantly.
Most system applications for the RADAR Flashlight involve inspection of spaces beyond a door or wall. For example, the system could be used to determine if a subject is standing behind a door without a requirement that the door be opened. This technique could be used to detect a subject behind a front door who fails to answer a knock. It can also be used to inspect a closed space such as an interior closet. Normally, the closet would have to be opened to determine if someone was hiding inside.
4. Operational Theory and Design:
Figure 2 is a photograph of the current version of the laboratory prototype
RADAR Flashlight. Referring to Figure 2, the system is housed in a flashlight
shaped enclosure. The radar is mounted in the front of the housing, and
the system's microwave lens, used to "shape" the antenna beam, is installed
in the position of the optical lens normally found on a standard flashlight.
The battery compartment is longer than those found on a normal flashlight.
It is currently planned that the system's signal processor and rechargeable
batteries will be housed in the extended battery compartment once the current
laboratory prototype is reduced to a field testable prototype.
The current external signal processor used with the laboratory prototype is shown in Figure 2 as the printed circuit board to the left of the RADAR Flashlight. No attempt has been made to miniaturize this signal processor which is currently used to filter the respiration signature from other signals caused by radar self motion, fluorescent lights and other clutter effects. The laboratory prototype unit shown in Figure 2 operates on a frequency near 10.525 GHz, although an earlier version of the system was operated at 24.1 GHz and demonstrated less sensitivity to motion through a 20 centimeter hollow brick block wall. The current laboratory prototype is a homodyne radar configuration, although a frequency modulated continuous wave (FM-CW) system could be used for applications where information is required to determine the range to the target. The current laboratory prototype operates in the near field region of the antenna for most through the wall detection scenarios.
The current laboratory system signal processor (shown in Figure 2) processes the respiration signal and the associated signal in the time domain so that the time domain record is preserved. The processor essentially acts as a low pass filter with the cut off frequency shoulder just above the highest respiration frequencies that are expected. This first filter rejects most of the ambient clutter sources such as fluorescent lights. The analog time domain signal is fed into an analog to digital converter hosted by a laboratory computer where the input signal is converted into a 12 bit analog word and displayed on a computer generated strip chart recording. Once in digital format, the signal can be subjected to more rigorous processing to retrieve the respiration signal under heavy clutter conditions including those due to body motion and other artifacts.
Figure 3 is a recording of a respiration signature that was taken by the RADAR Flashlight located 24 centimeters from a hollow core 20 centimeter thick concrete building block wall. The subject was instructed to stand 1.8 meters beyond the brick wall and not to move once in position but to breathe normally. The RADAR Flashlight's beam projected through the wall and was approximately centered on the thorax region of the subject's chest.
Referring to Figure 3, time moves from left to right. The ambient signal level without a subject in the beam is shown as point A. The point at which the subject enters the beam is shown as point B. Upon the subject's entry into the beam, there is a large downward shift in signal level. The shift occurs because the detector is D.C. coupled to the first stage of the signal preamplifier. As a result, there is a shift in the level of the signal due to a change in phase along the signal path caused by the placement of the subject's body into the beam. Points C, D, E, F and G are negative excursions caused by the movement of the chest wall toward the radar during respiration. The subject was told to breathe once approximately every five seconds and the record shows that this instruction was followed. The subject steps out of the beam at approximately 52 seconds. The signal level returns to the ambient level at point H. There was a D.C. level drift of approximately 230 millivolts over the 60 second period during which the test was conducted. This signal drift would not normally appear because the output of the detector would be A.C. coupled through a D.C. blocking capacitor between the detector diode and the preamplifier input.
5. Design Philosophy:
The RADAR Flashlight will detect the body movement of a subject at
longer ranges than those at which the respiration signature can be detected
when the subject is stationary. Total body motion presents a much larger
Doppler modulated radar cross section than the small respiration induced
movement of the chest wall. Unfortunately, when the RADAR Flashlight is
used for law enforcement applications, the subject can not be depended
upon to voluntarily move during the search process. Thus, the detection
of the involuntary respiration signature is necessary to ensure that the
motionless subject can be detected.
Several system utilization scenarios have been developed for the RADAR Flashlight. When a fugitive warrant is being executed, interior closets are often the hiding places of choice for individuals who are sometimes armed and dangerous. It is the duty of those serving the warrant to open each closet door and inspect the interior space. This requirement puts the law enforcement personnel at a disadvantage. The RADAR Flashlight can detect fugitives or others hiding in a closet without requiring that the closet door be opened to complete the inspection.
During a hostage situation it may be possible to determine where in a room the hostages are located and it may also be possible to determine where the hostage takers are located at any given time, assuming that the usual hostage scenarios are followed. Hostages are usually closely controlled and may be physically restrained or under duress to prevent their escape. Thus, a hostage is generally not moving but will be breathing. The hostage taker may be highly mobile and may move from room to room to inspect his or her defenses, communicate with police, and continually assess the environment. There are exceptions, however, but if this scenario is the case even 50 percent of the time, the RADAR Flashlight may be able to help determine the location of the hostage taker(s) and determine the location of the hostages. It is envisioned that a member of the Special Weapons and Tactics Team (SWATT) would take a position against the outside wall of the room of interest. The SWATT member would attempt to first detect motion and later detect respiration in a more careful search. The RADAR Flashlight would be scanned slowly across the room.
Warrant servers are required to go to a home or business to serve warrants on persons who in many cases do not want to accept the warrant or even let the server know that they are present. This is especially true when the individual will go to jail if they are discovered. The RADAR Flashlight could help determine if there is an individual behind the door but not answering the door.
6. Real World Requirements for System Acceptance:
The system must be inexpensive to produce in large quantities and in
the same price range as a top end weapon carried by a law enforcement officer.
Thus, a target price for the RADAR Flashlight product was set at between
$300 and $500. It is thought that the most expensive part of the system
would be the RF section followed by the digital signal processor. If future
marketing studies should determine that high sales volumes can be achieved,
the parts count in the system can be reduced significantly by implementing
the system in a chip set. The cost of converting the system to a chip set
would be amortized over the high number of systems sold.
There is a requirement that the system should be capable of being operated
by a relatively unskilled operator. This requirement suggested that the
packaging of the system was important and that the associated signal processor
should be "smart" and make many of the decisions regarding target identification
for the operator. Given this requirement, a flashlight configuration was
adopted as a housing. The final form of the target display has not yet
been determined, although a simple display would appear to be an acceptable
option.
7. Steps Toward Commercialization:
The RADAR Flashlight is currently a laboratory instrument and, as such,
is not designed to be used while in motion. When the RADAR Flashlight is
in motion it receives Doppler shifted signals that are generated from its
own motion referenced to fixed objects in front of the sensor. Depending
on the radar cross section of the "radar clutter," the clutter return can
be very large compared to the small return from the chest motion generated
by respiration. GTRI has developed two approaches to achieve cancellation
of the self motion of the RADAR Flashlight. Research must still be conducted
to determine which self motion technique is most effective and to develop
the self motion cancellation algorithms.
GTRI has developed a research plan to take the RADAR Flashlight from
the laboratory prototype to a field testable prototype. After field testing,
it is anticipated that deficiencies will be found that must be corrected.
After deficiency corrections are undertaken the system will be licensed
to a manufacturer to produce as a product. The next challenge is to find
the manufacturer capable of producing a quality product and also capable
of funding the research that remains to transition the RADAR Flashlight
from a laboratory prototype to a pre-production prototype.
8. Reference:
1. E. F. Greneker, "Radar Sensing of Heartbeat and Respiration at a
Distance with Security Applications," Proceedings of SPIE, Radar Sensor
Technology II, Volume 3066, Orlando, Florida, pp. 22-27, April, 1997.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For More Information, Contact:
Eugene F. Greneker
Radar Systems Division, Surface Systems Branch
Sensors and Electromagnetic Applications Laboratory
Georgia Tech Research Institute
Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0856
Phone: (770) 528-7744
E-mail: gene.greneker@gtri.gatech.edu
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