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Microwave beam weapon to disperse crowds

Josey1Josey1 Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
edited October 2001 in General Discussion
Microwave beam weapon to disperse crowds 19:00 24 October 01 Jeff Hecht, Boston Tests of a controversial weapon that is designed to heat people's skin with a microwave beam have shown that it can disperse crowds. But critics are not convinced the system is safe.Last week, the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) in New Mexico finished testing the system on human volunteers. The Air Force now wants to use this Active Denial Technology (ADT), which it says is non-lethal, for peacekeeping or riot control at "relatively long range" - possibly from low-flying aircraft.ADT uses a 2-metre dish to create a narrow beam of microwaves that can be scanned across a crowd or even aimed at individuals. AFRL is using infrared photography to analyse the heating effect on the volunteers' bodies. AFRL says that the 3-millimetre wavelength radiation penetrates only 0.3 millimetres into the skin, rapidly heating the surface above the 45 ?C pain threshold. At 50 ?C, they say the pain reflex makes people pull away automatically in less than a second - it's said to feel like fleetingly touching a hot light bulb. Someone would have to stay in the beam for 250 seconds before it burnt the skin, the lab says, giving "ample margin between intolerable pain and causing a burn". Little data But critics question the AFRL's claims that the weapon's undisclosed exposure levels are safe. John Pike of think tank Globalsecurity.org fears that the beam power needed to scare people may be too close to the level that would injure them. Air Force scientists helped set the present skin safety threshold of 10 milliwatts per square centimetre in the early 1990s, when little data was available, says Louis Slesin, editor of Microwave News. That limit covers exposure to steady fields for several minutes to an hour - but heating a layer of skin 0.3 mm thick to 50 ?C in just one second requires much higher power and may pose risks to the cornea, which is more sensitive than skin. A study published last year in the journal Health Physics showed that exposure to 2 watts per square centimetre for three seconds could damage the corneas of rhesus monkeys. http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99991470

Comments

  • luger01luger01 Member Posts: 230 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Sounds ideal until you realize that some people are disabled adn cannot get away quickly. Then waht about people who get knocked down when others are fleeing?Should open one hell of a lot of lawsuits if ever used and be the next best thing to the tobacco lawsuits for trial lawyers! Just imagine, burn someone who is disabled just because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time.Any government that uses somthing like that against its citizens deserves to be overthrown!
  • 218Beekeep218Beekeep Member Posts: 3,033
    edited November -1
    arkresearch warned us of such things to come!!.218
  • LowriderLowrider Member Posts: 6,587
    edited November -1
    Don't forget about the fringe benefits.Wonderful stuff like skin cancer, blindness, brain tumors...Man! The fun they can have with that thing.
    Lord Lowrider the LoquaciousMember:Secret Select Society of Suave Stylish Smoking Jackets She was only a fisherman's daughter,But when she saw my rod she reeled.
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