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Hands on the Wheel, Cameras on the Road

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If vision technology wants to hitch a ride aboard commercial automobiles, it must improve component cost-performance ratios without reinventing the wheel.

Daniel C. McCarthy, Senior Editor

When General Motors introduced the night-vision option in its 2000 DeVille, it selected the "Cadillac" of infrared technology, a ferroelectric focal plane array. Not far removed from the thermal imagers used in the Gulf War, the 320 x 240-pixel detector from Raytheon Systems Co. in Dallas senses thermal gradients emitted as mid-infrared light between 7 and 14 µm. The technology was lauded by the automotive trade press and became, like the Cadillac, a sort of status symbol for motorists. But prestige alone cannot fuel the spread of automotive technology, nor can data from both the...Read full article

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    Published: April 2001
    FeaturesSensors & Detectors

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