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LEXID: lobster eye x-ray imaging device

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  • LEXID: lobster eye x-ray imaging device



    USA Today article....

    Lobster serves as model for new X-ray device

    The lobster is at the forefront of the next new weapon in the war on terror: a handheld device that could help Homeland Security agents see through wood, concrete and steel.

    Technology based on the crustacean's uncanny ability to see through dark, cloudy, deep sea water is guiding scientists funded by the government in the early stages of developing a ray that one day could be used by border agents, airport screeners and the Coast Guard.

    David Throckmorton, a project manager in Homeland Security's Science and Technology division, says a California company has developed a handheld prototype called the LEXID (Lobster Eye X-ray Imaging Device) that can see through walls.

    The image, shown on a small screen, isn't "high-definition TV quality," Throckmorton says. But it's good enough to pick up a cache of weapons or the parts for a bomb. It can also show a border agent if a person is crouched on the other side of a steel or concrete wall.

    The patented device, which radiates objects with tiny amounts of X-ray energy, is "modeled exactly after the lobster living in the deepest, darkest part of the ocean," says Rick Shie, senior vice president at Physical Optics Corporation, which is developing the LEXID.

    A lobster's eyes, which look like small antenna, are made up of thousands of tiny square channels that allow the eyes to focus by reflection, rather than

    That unique optical geometric design, which allows lobsters to see in the dimmest light, is being adapted into a "lobster-eye lens" that focuses the X-ray images so that the device can actually see through a wall and project an image of what's on the other side.

    Shie says his company hopes to have the device perfected within a year so that Homeland Security agents can test it on the job.

    There's no estimate yet on how much each device would cost, but Shie says they hope to make it inexpensively enough so that it could have wide commercial appeal, including to pest control companies and contractors who need to look inside walls for rats or pipes.

    At Homeland Security, which has so far invested just under $1 million in the research, the LEXID could help members of the Coast Guard who inspect ships for weapons, drugs and stowaways. It could also help airport workers who check the crates loaded onto passenger planes and seaport inspectors concerned about the contents of the large metal cargo containers being taken off foreign ships, Throckmorton says.

    If a ship manifest says that a particular container is supposed to be filled with boxes, he says, the LEXID would allow an inspector to make sure it's not full of 55-gallon drums.

    Shie says the device could help agents find all kinds of hidden contraband. "That's how the guys that don't like us fund their work," he says. "And they're pretty sneaky."
    Company site....

    The Handheld “Lobster-Eye” X-ray Inspection Device (LEXID) provides through - the - wall focusing and acquisition of backscattering photons from a hidden object irradiated by a cone beam from a low power X-ray generator. The X-ray optic focusing, combined with the X-ray detector significantly lowers the exposure dose, greatly enhancing image resolution. At the emitter side, the collimating optics increases flow of X-rays for deeper penetration through objects of interest, with the same X-ray tube.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    Very cool.
    More StarTrek stuff becomes reality every day it seems.
    Chuck
    秋音的爸爸

    Comment


    • #3
      Could I check out what my Christmas presents are with this?
      Q9450 + TRUE, G.Skill 2x2GB DDR2, GTX 560, ASUS X48, 1TB WD Black, Windows 7 64-bit, LG M2762D-PM 27" + 17" LG 1752TX, Corsair HX620, Antec P182, Logitech G5 (Blue)
      Laptop: MSI Wind - Black

      Comment


      • #4
        You could probably check what the neighbors Christmas presents are with it, from outside their house.
        Dr. Mordrid
        ----------------------------
        An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

        I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

        Comment


        • #5
          ...which would be a good reason for it not to be freely available? Thieves would know where to target their efforts...
          FT.

          Comment


          • #6
            if that thing was commercially available, total life long exposure to x-ray radiation would definitly increase.

            mfg
            wulfman
            "Perhaps they communicate by changing colour? Like those sea creatures .."
            "Lobsters?"
            "Really? I didn't know they did that."
            "Oh yes, red means help!"

            Comment


            • #7
              Not as much as you'd think. The source can be quite low level with todays sensor technologies. A new sensor for doing digital x-rays announced just in the last few months will cut exposures by over 90%, and yes it can be used instead of film in routine exams.
              Dr. Mordrid
              ----------------------------
              An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

              I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

              Comment


              • #8
                And how, exactly, is it an improvement over this:

                Chuck
                秋音的爸爸

                Comment


                • #9
                  Gawd....I haven't seen those in AGES

                  If you want to look under ladies clothing with lecherous intent then t-ray imagers are better than x-rays. They remove the clothes but don't necessarily penetrate the skin and aren't ionizing. This field should move fast now that the Argonne Labs, working with others at the University of Tokyo and Izmir Institute of Technology in Turkey, have developed a solid state coherent t-ray emitter.
                  Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 21 December 2007, 16:15.
                  Dr. Mordrid
                  ----------------------------
                  An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

                  I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Dr Mordrid View Post
                    Not as much as you'd think. The source can be quite low level with todays sensor technologies. A new sensor for doing digital x-rays announced just in the last few months will cut exposures by over 90%, and yes it can be used instead of film in routine exams.
                    for x-rays you are working with radiation passing through the tissue, here you are working with reflected radiation, which - as far as I know - is far weaker and more widely scattered than directed radiation that will be detected again after some 20-100cm. so the initial source is probably significantly stronger...

                    mfg
                    wulfman
                    "Perhaps they communicate by changing colour? Like those sea creatures .."
                    "Lobsters?"
                    "Really? I didn't know they did that."
                    "Oh yes, red means help!"

                    Comment

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