New uses for radio showing up at U.

2 researchers are using wavelengths to see through walls

Published: Monday, Oct. 12, 2009 11:45 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

Video may not have killed the radio star.

Two University of Utah researchers have found a viable use for radio wavelengths that can see through walls and be used in places video cameras cannot.

U. graduate student Joey Wilson and Neal Patwari, a professor in the department of electrical and computer engineering, have developed a technology that could help police nab intruders and help firefighters find victims in a burning home. It could even be used to help patrol the border.

"By showing the locations of people within a building during hostage situations, fires or other emergencies, radio tomography can help law enforcement and emergency responders to know where they should focus their attention," Wilson and Patwari wrote in one of two new studies on the method. Their method uses radio tomographic imaging, which can "see," locate and track moving people or objects in an area through inexpensive radio transceivers.

Story continues below

The small radio devices, which are typically placed at about waist height for an average person, can be put around an area that police or other emergency personnel want to monitor. The transceivers emit radio signals of differing strengths as they pass through various subjects, noting stronger signals as a person moves. The signal is then relayed as a bloblike image on a computer screen. Similar technology allows researchers to track that movement through walls.

The process is much less expensive than radar, which bounces signals off individual targets to provide the target's location and speed, and RTI has advantages other technology lacks, making it a possibly more efficient system for police and fire departments.

"(Radio frequency) signals can travel through obstructions such as walls, trees and smoke, while optical and infrared imaging systems cannot," the engineers wrote. "RF imaging will also work in the dark, where video cameras will fail." In many circumstances, video cameras violate privacy and prevent their use. "An RTI system provides current images of the location of people and their movements but cannot be used to identify a person."

The technique can't distinguish good guys from bad guys, but it can tell emergency personnel where people are located in a hostage situation or keep police from entering a building during a dangerous event.

Patwari said the method still needs some improvements and could be improved to detect people in a burning building. Wilson believes it could be used in a "smarter alarm system" for homes.

Recent comments

Though it has its limitations, (requiring movement), there is...

Anonymous | Oct. 13, 2009 at 11:25 a.m.

Wow! It will be interesting to follow this technology... could be big.

Jerry H | Oct. 13, 2009 at 10:50 a.m.

That is SO COOL

Rick | Oct. 13, 2009 at 10:26 a.m.

Image
Sarang Joshi and Joey Wilson, University of Utah

Left, a person walks inside a square of 28 radio transceivers at the University of Utah. The person creates "shadows" in the radio waves, resulting in the image displayed at right.

previousnext

Latest comments

Why should I care how large the “National Debt” is? There has...

Cougars beat Utes in overtime

To many old WAC minded comments. I saw two equally matched teams fighting a...

I love the fire and emotion. BYU wins. I was very disappointed in his game...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

...that these words will be remembered longer than his BYU winning and...

Cougars beat Utes in overtime

Way to be there, cuz!

Dick, why can't you write factual stories? That last pass was NOT against...

Aggies blow away T-birds

I can't wait to see the thrashing laid on BYU. Let's go Aggies!

There's a sign there, in your writing. If the only place you're finding...

Max apologize? for What?

@Doug G: it is your type of attitude towards others freedom and liberties...

Advertisements