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Lasers Help Detect Mines

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Brent D. Johnson

There are more than 100 million land mines worldwide and, for every 15 of them, someone is maimed or loses a limb. A team at the US Army CECOM Night Vision and Sensors Directorate in Alexandria, Va., led by University of Mississippi professor James Sabatier, has developed a noncontact method of detecting land mines that uses laser feedback interferometry. It's an old problem, he said. "How does one detect acoustic resonant phenomena just below the surface of the ground and yet not make contact with the surface?" He said that, like a bell or a drum, a land mine is a compliant object...Read full article

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    Published: July 2002
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