New Landmine Detection Method to Reduce False Alarm Rates

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Photo by Lisa Bistreich-Wolfe/Army Research Laboratory, https://www.dvidshub.net/image/6321732/new-landmine-identification-method
Photo by Lisa Bistreich-Wolfe/Army Research Laboratory, https://www.dvidshub.net/image/6321732/new-landmine-identification-method

September 15, 2020 | Originally published by U.S. Army CCDC Army Research Laboratory Public Affairs on August 18, 2020

Landmines pose a serious threat in conflict areas, yet modern detection systems struggle to discriminate between explosives and clutter. A project funded by the U.S. Army developed a new method for landmine identification that will greatly reduce false alarm rates.

Fewer false alarms will significantly reduce the cost of humanitarian landmine clearance operations and provide greater road mobility by avoiding unnecessary route detours. With this new technology, landmines can be detected without digging.

Vadum, Inc., North Carolina State University, the Georgia Institute of Technology, and the Army Research Office (ARO), an element of the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command’s Army Research Laboratory, collaborated to develop what’s known as the Vibration-ENhanced Underground Sensing system, or VENUS.

“New concepts are rare in the area of landmine detection,” said Dr. James Harvey, ARO Program Manager. “This advance has the potential to be a game changer.”

The Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate of the U.S. Army CCDC C5ISR Center supported the research as a part of an Army Small Business Technology Transfer award managed by ARO.

Most conventional landmine detectors are based on detecting the electromagnetic signature of the mine itself, which can easily be confused with other buried metal objects or wet or magnetic soil patches.

With this new technology, published in the proceedings of the 2020 SPIE Defense & Commercial Sensing Conference, the small metal parts inside the landmine are stimulated to vibrate using a pulsed magnetic field. Most other buried objects don’t respond to the magnetic pulse and those that do have very different vibrational characteristics. The vibrations are detected by a unique high dynamic range vibrometer that can distinguish closely-spaced, low-frequency vibrations.

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