Explosives Detection Breakthrough Via Green Laser 49
retiarius writes "In keeping with celebrating the USA's
National Chemistry Week (aside from watching the hitcount
for Tom Lehrer's very chemical music video at
CD Baby), I'm duly impressed by an amazingly simple new way to
detect explosives at a distance -- just use a store-bought
presentation green laser pointer and some dimestore
infrared night vision glasses! The (alas, patentable)
details are in
this week's EE Times."
Cool! (Score:2)
Re:Cool! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Cool! (Score:2)
Re:Cool! (Score:2)
You mean like... with a patent?
Re:Cool! (Score:2)
Brilliant!
Re:Cool! (Score:1)
False positives & meat (Score:5, Interesting)
Eat a hot dog or deli sandwich before going through security and you may end up in the dreaded secondary screening line when the bomb detector mistakes bologna for a bomb.
Re:False positives & meat (Score:4, Funny)
Yikes!
Now I can't take bacon on planes. Oh well, it's for security.
Re:False positives & meat (Score:3, Informative)
The only bomb-sniffing dogs I know are real pussycats. They have the kind of disposition that you trust with the baby, even when the baby is teething and thinks chewing on the dog's ears will help.
Re:False positives & meat (Score:2)
Re:False positives & meat (Score:3, Insightful)
Far as I can tell, bomb-sniffing dogs are chosen for intelligence and mild disposition. The former so they can learn what they need to know, the latter because they do their work around strangers a lot, and it doesn't do to have the dog wig out over the number of strange people in the area while it does what it was trained to do.
Re:False positives & meat (Score:3, Funny)
In other words, people think dogs are like people.
Aren't we all "Meat"? (Score:2)
Re:Aren't we all "Meat"? (Score:2)
Re:Aren't we all "Meat"? (Score:2)
Incidentally, it's a good idea to stay away from nitrate/nitrite-laced meats anyway; they're really not good for you. Having a diet coke and a hot dog? The aspartame in the diet coke
Re:False positives & meat (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:False positives & meat (Score:2, Informative)
> mentioned, no?
There is some nitrit included in your list. But please remember, that the absorption and emission wave length not only depend on a single atom or bond but are also greatly influensed by the surrounding bonds/structures.
Your list is nothing but a first indication if the choosen method should be investigated.
Re:False positives & meat (Score:3, Informative)
On the other hand, while nitrites are still allowed as preservatives and colour fixatives in meat products, they should have been banned long ago. Such accidents [nih.gov] are unfortunately still pretty common. 1g is usually considered as a fatal dose.
Why alas? US govt can use patents royalty-free. (Score:5, Informative)
Once debugged (meat), the mfr will probably be able to sell the devices to the govt. If they charge too much, the GSA (procurement) will go out for bids. Local and state bomb squads will have more trouble, but the Federal govt could just give them detectors under some fancy pgm.
upping the ante... (Score:3, Interesting)
you then have to find a way to seal the container air-tight (low-tech
ok.. we just upped the ante and non-professionnal bomb makers won't be able to make the technological jump...=>more security
but it's nothing that someone with some organisation couldn't do...but we have to assume anyone with that sort of hardware is checked and easier to find out.
Alas, after going through this procedure (or any other they think of) they (terrorists-bomber-mad(wo)men now only have to get said night visions googles and green laser and test it themselves...
just another check in in the seemingly already complicated art of making bombs (I wouldn't know, as IANAB -I Am Not A Bomber - 8p )
I think they should have kept it a secret longer, even if they precised it was already one year old...
Re:upping the ante... (Score:3, Interesting)
All Is Patentable!! (Score:3, Funny)
Never mind all that stuff about physical phenomena being unpatentable. Here at the USPTO we grant with prejudice to trifling things like gross obviousness, unoriginality and indeed patentablity itself.
Applicants for patents on Earth, Air, Fire and Water are now currently being considered.
P.S.
If anyone, including all you foreigners, doesn't like it, be prepared for our lawyers to WIPO you into povert^H^H^H^H^H^Hsubmission.
Re:All Is Patentable!! (Score:1)
Re:All Is Patentable!! (Score:2)
No, that isn't what was patented. The critical bit that was patented was the discrimination that eliminates false positives. So buy, use, and sell all the green lasers and night vision goggles that you want. Just don't try to sell a combined laser/NVG device that has the ability to turn on the correct filters.
Re:All Is Patentable!! (Score:2, Informative)
They're patenting the creation of such a device (characteristic filters and design) for use as an explosives detector. This is reasonable. As much as patenting a light bulb or a new kind of car engine. A light bulb is just a fancy resistor in a clear vacuum case, right? New LED's are just chemicals stuck between electrode's, right?
This is pretty basic chemistry, and it is quite interesting. My lab does similar stuff in the biomedical/chemical sensing area. We avoid work that involve weapons and things tha
Instant Application Around The World (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Instant Application Around The World (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Instant Application Around The World (Score:2)
Discovery is one year old (Score:2)
I wonder how many lives could have been saved already if they hadn't kept this under wraps for a year...
Re:Discovery is one year old (Score:2)
What about a bomb in a bag or backpack? (Score:3, Interesting)
Easy to Fool? (Score:3, Insightful)
For example, suppose non-explosive substance foo photoluminesces at and around 705-nm, and is normally allowed past the detector because it lacks the special signature. If you were to put a bunch of foo in the same container as your explosive, thereby combining the infrared signatures (if that's actually what would happen), couldn't you fool the detector?
Of course, the article is light on real details, and I'm no chemistry expert, so maybe it's not that easy to fool.
Re:Easy to Fool? (Score:2)
Very good point. Throwing more CPU at the problem, and analyzing the spectra in greater detail might be able to get around that. (For example, perhaps the peak at 705nm would be higher than the other wavelengths near it.)
Re:Easy to Fool? (Score:2)
And since explosives are so reactive, there is outgassing which produces a small chemical trail (how dogs can sniff explosives), which means that you can't hide the smell of the bomb by sealing it up.
Send green lasers to the troops in Iraq now! (Score:3, Insightful)
How soon before... (Score:2)
Doesn't chaff defeat any detection device? (Score:4, Insightful)
If it's so sensitive that the bad guys can't cleanse themselves of it, how could one possibly clean an entire airport?
Pat
Re:Doesn't chaff defeat any detection device? (Score:2)
Very old trick (Score:1)
Useful only as first-screen method (Score:4, Informative)
2) This method will not work for acetonperoxide (the super-unstable explosive prefered by Palestinian suicide bombers and the wannabe shoe-bomber Reid - because acetonperoxide does not contain any nitros) and for fertilizer bombs (no volatile nitroorganics there).
3)Also, this detection method can be fooled by masking the narrow fluorescence signature of nitro explosives by adding other chemicals with broad fluorescence to confuse the instrument into thinking "this is a false positive". All it takes for the bad guys to get hold of the detection device and experiment with some common household, drugstore or paintshop materials to find the right stuff to spray onto their luggage making it immune for this detection. It may well be that a laundry softener or moskyto repellent can threw this techique off.
4) The currently used swab-tests/mass spectrometry analysis at the airports recognize very characteristic ion mass (of the parent molecule and its fragments) - the signal pattern unique for each explosive, so this masspec method is harder to fool and less likely to give false positives.
Attribution! (Score:1)
making checkpoints safer & more effective (Score:2)
If so, this technology could make a lot of terrorist meth
Oh yeah? (Score:2)