The US government is eyeing a technology that can 3D-photograph people through walls using Wi-Fi
YouTube/AmpliFi
Shortly after Business Insider wrote about a new technology that can photograph objects in 3D through walls using Wi-Fi, we received a call from the US government.
The call was from Brett Scharringhausen, a technology scout with the Central Command, also known as CENTCOM. The group oversees US military operations for the Department of Defense in 20 countries located throughout the Middle East, northern Africa, and parts of Asia.
Scharringhausen was looking for more information on the Wi-Fi holography technology, possibly in hopes of capitalizing on it for the armed forces. (We pointed Scharringhausen to a publicly available study in Physical Review Letters.)
"I go out looking for new technologies [most days] of the year that could support men and women in uniform," Scharringhausen told Business Insider. He says the military, CIA, police, FBI, and others "would all like to look through walls."
The most promising technologies get shared far beyond the walls of CENTCOM and the military.
"If we find something useful, we socialize it with them," says Scharringhausen - with "them" being the armed forces (the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, and Coast Guard), his bosses, and ultimately science and technology contacts within the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of State, CIA, FBI, NSA, and other relevant federal agencies.
If multiple wings of the government have a need for a certain technology, the thinking goes, Scharringhausen says it's easier to achieve "economies of scale" in manufacturing, avoid redundancies, get it into the hands of troops and law enforcement officials more rapidly, and save taxpayer dollars.
Philip Holls and Friedemann Reinhard/Physical Review Letters (CC BY 3.0)
To be clear, the specific see-through-walls WiFi technology that CENTCOM asked us about can't see faces - only the rough shapes of objects - and may not ever be used by the government.
For one, the ability to make on-the-fly holograms of people and objects through walls is still in its infancy, so it may take many years and possibly millions of dollars to develop into a practical technology.
Second, anything that a technology scout considers must pass several high bars, including avoiding redundancies with other devices or techniques. If it doesn't entirely replace a legacy device or system while improving it, "it is called additive and that is almost certain to fail" funding consideration, Scharringhausen told Business Insider in an email.
However, technology scouts are also supposed "[s]eek out game-changing technologies which our customer(s) don't know they need," on 10- or even 20-year timelines, according to an unclassified presentation provided by Scharringhausen. He says these out-there projects can receive funding, even if they're unlikely to work now, because they might be useful later.
"Sometimes it's not a failure if it can't do what it's supposed to do. Sometimes it's a physics problem. Sometimes the science hasn't caught up yet," he says.
Philipp Holl, a 23-year-old undergraduate physics student at the Technical University of Munich who led the new technology's development, told Business Insider via email that he hasn't yet "had any contact with someone from the US Central Command".
For more details on Holl's holographic Wi-Fi technology, read our full story here.
You can also watch the video below, which shows how it works.
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