Paper
21 July 2000 Low-Cost Microsensors Program
John Steven Anderson, Daryl Bradley, Richard Chin, William A. Radford, Adam Kennedy, Daniel F. Murphy, Michael Ray, Richard Wyles, James C. Brown, Gwendolyn W. Newsome
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The objectives of the Low Cost Microsensors Program are twofold. The first is to develop and deliver a long-range infrared (IR) sensor built upon an uncooled vanadium oxide (VOx) 640 X 480 format focal plane array (FPA) engine. The second is to develop an expendable microsensor built upon a VOx 160 X 120 format FPA engine. The 640 X 480 sensor is applicable to long-range surveillance and targeting missions and is a reusable asset. The 160 X 120 sensor is designed for applications where miniaturization is required as well as low cost and low power. The 160 X 120 is also intended for expendable military applications. The intent of this DUS&T effort is to further reduce the cost, weight, and power of uncooled IR sensors, and to increase the capability of these sensors, thereby expanding their applicability to military and commercial markets never before addressed by thermal imaging.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
John Steven Anderson, Daryl Bradley, Richard Chin, William A. Radford, Adam Kennedy, Daniel F. Murphy, Michael Ray, Richard Wyles, James C. Brown, and Gwendolyn W. Newsome "Low-Cost Microsensors Program", Proc. SPIE 4040, Unattended Ground Sensor Technologies and Applications II, (21 July 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.392562
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Microsensors

Staring arrays

Cameras

Surveillance

Infrared sensors

Packaging

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