Getting deeper into the future of unmanned systems. This camera mounted on
a drone is simply amazing, built using several mobile phone cameras.
Ingenuous Technology. Watch the video.
*
*We Can See You -- From 17,500 Feet In The Air
A new video from the world's highest-resolution drone-mounted camera is
mind-blowingly clear. And terrifying.

 By Shaunacy Ferro Posted 01.28.2013 at 6:03 pm

 [image: Crazy Camera]

Crazy Camera PBS

Curious as to how the Defense Department could be spying on you next? PBS
checked in with DARPA about the latest in drone camera technology for the
NOVA special "Rise of the Drones," including the world's highest-resolution
camera.

Actually *seeing* the sensor on ARGUS-IS, or Autonomous Real-Time Ground
Ubiquitous Surveillance Imaging System, is still classified, but the basics
of how it works have been deemed fit for public consumption.

ARGUS-IS uses 368 imaging chips like those found in cell phone cameras, to
stitch together a 1.8 billion pixel video. That means from 17,500 feet in
the air, ARGUS-IS can see someone on the ground waving their arms. And it
generates that kind of high-definition video for an area 15 square miles
across. It can see a bird flying through a parking lot from more than three
miles in the air.

It can store a million terabytes of video a day, up to 5,000 hours of
footage, so soon drones will not only be able to see everything that
happens on the ground, but also keep that record.
Whether or not ARGUS has been used in the field is still classified. Let's
get real, though:
Does this cool a toy get put in a corner?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGxNyaXfJsA&feature=player_embedded

1 million terabytes a day saved forever.

The ARGUS array is made up of several cameras and other types of imaging
systems. The output of the imaging system is used to create extremely
large, 1.8GP high-resolution mosaic images and video.

The U.S. Army, along with Boeing, has developed and is preparing to deploy
a new unmanned aircraft called the "Hummingbird." It's is a VTOL-UAS
(vertical take-off and landing unmanned aerial system). Three of them are
being deployed to Afghanistan for a full year to survey and spy on
Afghanistan from an altitude of 20,000 feet with the ability to scan 25
square miles of
ground surface.






-- 
With best wishes

S Chander

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