Skip to content Skip to main navigation Report an accessibility issue

News

Fast computers, 5G networks and radar that passes through walls are bringing ‘X-ray vision’ closer to reality

Picture of demonstration of wall-penetrating radar

This laboratory wall-penetrating radar provides more detail than today’s commercial systems.

 

Within seconds after reaching a city, earthquakes can cause immense destruction: Houses crumble, high-rises turn to rubble, people and animals are buried in the debris.

In the immediate aftermath of such carnage, emergency personnel desperately search for any sign of life in what used to be a home or office. Often, however, they find that they were digging in the wrong pile of rubble, and precious time has passed.

Imagine if rescuers could see through the debris to spot survivors under the rubble, measure their vital signs and even generate images of the victims. This is rapidly becoming possible using see-through-wall radar technology. Early versions of the technology that indicate whether a person is present in a room have been in use for several years, and some can measure vital signs albeit under better conditions than through rubble.

Read about Professor Aly Fathy’s imaging research