Acoustic systems enter homeland security market.

AuthorPappalardo, Joe
PositionSECURITY BEAT: Homeland Defense Briefs - American Technology Corp.

The use of amplifiers in homeland defense is going far beyond the simple bullhorns and bugle-shaped speakers mounted on towers. From public address systems to directed warnings to trespassers, the science of sound is being developed and marketed for homeland security applications.

American Technology Corp., of Topsham, Md., makes systems that can direct tightly focused acoustic beams at specific targets. Its Long Range Acoustic Device can project intelligible voice communication as far away as 500 meters.

The unit uses the same concept as other phased array systems, aiming many small sound waves to converge into a single beam. The beam neatly projects away from the flat, 33-inch diameter speaker, with few or none of the wavelets audible to the users.

LRAD is currently used on Navy ships, an application developed in response to the small boat terrorist attack on the USS Cole. "If you can't talk to them, you can't determine intent, and you have to put a boat in the water," said A.J. Ballard, director of force protection systems at ATC.

LRAD is also used by the military in Iraq and Afghanistan, providing a communication system for vehicles approaching checkpoints. Ballard noted that his system was being shipped to the Army 3rd Infantry Division to be used at checkpoints when soldiers accidentally shot and killed an Italian intelligence agent escorting an alleged hostage from Iraq. "LRAD was still on its way over," he said. "If you read the reports, they say those soldiers were screaming at the car, trying to be heard." The 3rd ID now has 150 LRADs deployed.

In late April, ATC reported a $690,000 order from the Army 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment.

The system has attracted customers beyond the military. LRAD is employed by large cruise ships, including the Queen Mary and all Princess cruise liners, to chase off harmless boaters and determine the intent of others breaching minimum standoff distances, Ballard said.

Border control officers also field speakers, as did the New York Police Department during the Republican National Convention. ATC personnel are quick to point out that their systems have been designed beneath pain thresholds, and are not non-lethal weapons.

Domestic use is the next hot market...

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