Detecting a surface swimmer using long wave infrared imaging polarimetry (Invited Paper)

Data from a recent “first-look” at using Long Wave InfraRed Imaging Polarimetry (LWIR-IP) to detect surface swimmers is presented and discussed. A significant increase in detection SNR over conventional IR imaging techniques was discovered. The physical phenomena that produces the increased SNR is discussed along with data that shows range effects and their degradation on the SNR. Most significantly, a method to classify the detected object using the same dataset is discussed. Augmenting current swimmer detection systems using this technique will likely significantly decrease the false alarm rates of the system, thus saving manpower resources and preserving force readiness.

[1]  Matthew P. Fetrow,et al.  Handheld polarimeter for phenomenology studies , 2004, SPIE Defense + Commercial Sensing.

[2]  Brian K. Jones,et al.  Electrical and optical implementations of the PCNN , 2001, Optics + Photonics.