Research could lead to pocket-sized bomb detectors.

AuthorBeidel, Eric
PositionTECHWIRE

* Soldiers eventually may have a pocket-sized device to warn them of nearby improvised explosive devices or suicide bombers.

That is the ultimate goal of university researchers trying to figure out a way to use sound and radio waves to detect bombs.

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The technique is similar to that used to detect landmines or oil reserves, said Douglas Adams, a mechanical engineering professor at Purdue University, which is part of the $7 million initiative funded by the Office of Naval Research and led by North Carolina State University.

The trick is to employ acoustics to penetrate an object that will then vibrate, making it detectable by other sensors such as radar. Researchers at Purdue will use a three-dimensional laser vibrometer to...

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