quinta-feira, 20 de agosto de 2009

US Army wants 2.3 gigapixel camera for aerial surveillance

US Army wants 2.3 gigapixel camera for aerial surveillance

DARPA may have already gone to the trouble of building a 1.8 gigapixel camera as part of its ARGUS-IS project (pictured above), but it looks like the US Army is setting its sights a little higher, and it’s now soliciting proposals for a 2.3 gigapixel camera that would be used for some super-wide aerial surveillance. While obviously still quite a ways from becoming reality, the Army hopes the system will be both smaller and lighter than previous systems, work in the infrared range to boot, and capture images at a rate of two frames per second. The key bit, however, is of course that 2.3 megapixel sensor, which should let the camera provide continous coverage of a range of about sixty-two square miles at a resolution of 0.3 meters, or just enough to make out the outline of your tinfoil hat.

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US Army wants 2.3 gigapixel camera for aerial surveillance originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 17:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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