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Title: Electronic Method to Detect Persons Hidden Within Cargo containers

Conference ·
OSTI ID:4776

Physical security technologies have been unable to address most `Trojan Horse' scenarios at vehicle portals which provide access through the perimeter of a secure area. Thorough visual searches of vehicle cargo containers are time consuming, involve a number of security personnel and are cursory at best. Vehicles entering or exiting a protected site provide an adversary with an easy pathway across secure boundaries. A method to detect the presence of persons hiding within a vehicle's enclosed cargo container has been developed by LQckheed Martin Energy Systems. The system measures vibrations coupled to the container and generated by the human heart. Each time the human heart beats, it generates a small but measurable shock wave. This shock wave is propagated through the body and transmitted to anything with which the body has contact. This wave is referred to as a baflistocardiograrn and is the mechanical equivalent to an electrocardiogram. Systems have been installed in several State prisons and have been independently tested and evaluated. The effectiveness of the system has been determined by the Thunder Mountain Evaluation Center at Fort Huachuca. Arizona. Sympathetic vibrations of the cargo container's surface can be collected using any of several detection methods, i.e. infrared, Doppler microwave, Doppler ultrasonic wave and geophones. The analog signal delivered by the sensors is passed through an amplifier and a low pass filter and then fed to a microprocessor via an analog to digital converter. When initiated by the operator, anafog signals are recorded for a specific interval of time and rate. At the end of the recording intervaL the data are analysed using wavelet transform techniques and compared with a ballistocardiographic template. If the collected data are similar, the system informs the operator that there is a high degree of probability that a person is within the vehicle. The paper describes in depth the development of the system, system operation, and system software and hardware, and discusses the algorithm, current development activities, testing, and actual usage of the system for the protection of nuclear facilities and State prisons. It focuses on technologies being evaluated for future iterations of the system and applications other than the protection of perimeters.

Research Organization:
Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant, Oak Ridge, TN
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE; USDOE Office of Defense Programs (DP)
DOE Contract Number:
AC05-84OR21400
OSTI ID:
4776
Report Number(s):
Y/PSO-0142; IAEA-CN-68-38; ON: DE00004776
Resource Relation:
Conference: IAEA Conference, Vienna, Nov 7, 1997
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English