Digital Construction

MoD backs bunker and tunnel detection microgravity technology

Image of a Cold War bunker in Ukraine to illustrate microgravity technology story
Image: 30949258 © Emevil | Dreamstime.com

Frontline military personnel will find it easier and safer to detect underground bunkers and tunnels with microgravity technology developed by a spin-out from Cambridge University.

Current tunnel detection methods such as ground penetrating radar and electromagnetics have several drawbacks, according to the Defence and Security Accelerator backing the microgravity technology. They are often bulky, costly and challenging to apply in situations featuring difficult-to-navigate terrain, making them less efficient for quick, mobile use.

Cambridge-based Silicon Microgravity identified the need to radically shrink and lower the cost and power consumption of underground structure detection systems, to enhance their effectiveness for defence. Drawing inspiration from the civil environment and the current use of conducting gravity surveys to detect buried infrastructure, the SME sought to adapt this technology for defence.

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