It can be used for biometrics security, battlefield triage, to search for vital signs after disasters, to monitor a patient’s heart condition and movement, to combat identity theft, for on‐line monitoring of operating machinery, and to monitor vehicles to avoid collisions.
The final, even smaller, member of the family has a 25m range and breaks with the naming convention as it is called the Assault Intervention Device. This was developed under an August 2010 contract from the US Department of Justice, which was looking for a non-lethal system able to break up riots in California prisons that had become too dangerous for prison officers.
In its prison configuration the system is remotely controlled, enabling officers to 'hose' the beam across an unruly group from behind cover.
Customers worldwide are interested in these systems to protect their high-value sites and critical assets.
Currently, ADS is employed by the US Marine Corps, and is set to be used for crowd control more generally, including 'perimeter and entrance control operations'.
We have to be very careful, because in international law – it’s very clear – that devices created solely for the creation of pain, can eventually lead to torture and are therefore illegal.
… mm wave body scanners operate in pulse modes. The power levels employed by these mm wave body scanners are low but can generate power densities up to 1.0 kW m_2 for a pulsed field averaged over the pulse width. The resulting human exposures are about a tenth of currently recommended guidelines for the general public.