As with anything that infantry is expected to carry, night vision device design must incorporate compromises balancing capability against the load they impose in terms of weight, bulk and power consumption.
Although core sensor technology is getting smaller, lighter and more frugal in its use of power while covering more bands of the electromagnetic spectrum than ever before, those spectral bands are made visible by different technologies. This forces the soldier to choose which spectral bands they will need to see, to carry several different devices, or to carry bulky apparatus that combine two or more sensor technologies. Those spectral bands include visible light, of which there is usually enough from the moon, stars or artificial sources. Sensors that amplify visible light often have an extended response into the longer wavelengths of the near Infrared (IR) spectrum. These include the analogue image intensifiers that have dominated infantry night vision for decades, and digital Complementary Metal Oxide Silicon (CMOS) chips that are finally challenging these legacy devices in some of these applications.
Intensified Improvement
Israel’s Meprolight, for example, makes infantry observation devices and weapon sights based on image intensifiers. As analogue devices in an increasingly digital world, image intensifiers could be considered anomalous, but their performance continues to improve: “Slowly and surely, I have seen the technology advancing, mainly in the quality of the picture produced by the tubes themselves,” said Yonatan Pinkas, director of sales and marketing at Meprolight: “Once you could have got a certain detection, recognition, or identification range on one tube with a certain magnification, but now with the same magnification on a sight, for example, you can get to longer ranges because of the sharpness of the image”, he told AMR: “That is what has been happening over the past five years, and I think the next five years will just see a really great leap in the technology.”
Denne historien er fra October 2017-utgaven av Asian Military Review.
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Denne historien er fra October 2017-utgaven av Asian Military Review.
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SMART MUNITIONS INCREASE MARKET SHARE
Top attack munitions are now widely developed for different artillery calibers with varied ranges.
NEXT GEN NVGS - A CLEAR IMPROVEMENT
Fused and enhanced night-vision technology will make the difference to soldiers fighting at night.
MILITARY ROTORCRAFT DEVELOPMENT - NO MORE ‘STOVEPIPES'
New rotorcraft are going to come with new abilities founded on open systems that provide easier upgrade paths and cheaper through life costs.
INDO PACIFIC UAV DIRECTORY 2021
The development of unmanned aerial vehicles is growing apace, especially in China. New longer range ISR platforms are also on the procurement list of several nations.
TIME TO RESET TRILATERAL RELATIONS
United States President Joe Biden has made it a top priority of his Administration to repair and re-energize global alliances during its first year in power. This is a necessary strategic and political calculus made in light of growing global security, public health, and environmental challenges that will require cooperation and multilateral contributions. President Trump’s ‘America first’ policy did much to undermine confidence in such relationships over his time in office.
SOCPAC KEEN TO SHARE JOINT DOCTRINE AND TRAINING
The return of Great Power competition means that US SOCPAC is more than ever seeking joint training opportunities with regional special forces.
MARINE ENGINE POWER - NOT JUST ABOUT KNOTS
Navies not only want more engine power, there are also coming under increasing pressure to become environmentally conscious.
AMPHIBIOUS FORCES
New amphibious concepts are re-shaping marine forces to break the A2AD defensive line.
SPACE V AIRBORNE ISR OR MIX AND MATCH
Owning satellite based ISR for military use is still an exclusive ‘club’, but airborne ISR still provides that most countries need.
SHIPBUILDING - A NUMBERS GAME
While experience grows among Indo-Pacific naval designers, order numbers remain crucial to keeping costs down and yards in business.