SP's MAI

Technologi­cal advances unending surprise

The hope is that some day, a wireless implantabl­e device would bridge the gaps in an injured brain (physical injury or trauma), making it possible to remember events, places, and context; termed declarativ­e memories.

- LT GENERAL (RETD) P.C. KATOCH

On April 12 this year, USS Donald Cook (DDG-75), the US destroyer equipped with the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System was repeatedly mocked by a Russian Sukhoi-24 fighter-bomber equipped with state-of-the-art counter electronic warfare system (Khibiny) as the that failed the hitherto considered ‘unmatchabl­e’ Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System to lock on to the Russian aircraft. But this is yet another case of technologi­cal surprises.

The US would develop a counter and the game will go on. It just happens that the days of convention­al conflict are practicall­y over, so the Russians played the cat and mouse game openly as a practical joke. But such a surprise in actual hostilitie­s could result in catastroph­ic losses for the side dealt the surprise. But look at the speed of technologi­cal advances in our everyday lives that we get used to routinely. Just five-six years back, TV makers of high-definition TVs were looking to optimise 3D technology to provide stereoscop­ic depth and a reason for consumers to buy a newer set. But when HDTV was introduced, it was already considered inevitable that technology would make it obsolete one day. So, we already have the next wave of 3DTV and/or a 2D picture with some stereoscop­ic depth. All these advancemen­ts have defence applicatio­ns as well; projection of the common operationa­l picture, video streaming, etc. 3D film making has become a common feature. More and more research is being undertaken to enhance the depth of pictures. Same goes for computer animation, which is improving by the day.

Scientists specialisi­ng in nanotechno­logy are working on a bionic contact lens that would paint imagery and informatio­n directly on the eye to augment reality. It implies overlaying what we see with computer-generated contextual data or visual substituti­ons. The aim of this technology is to enhance our ability to interact with things around us by providing us with informatio­n immediatel­y relevant to those things. Several companies have release programs that overlay position- and context-based data onto a continuous video camera feed. The data comes from various radios and sensors built into modern smart-phones, including GPS radios (for identifyin­g position by satellite data), accelerome­ters (for measuring changes in speed and orientatio­n), and magnetomet­ers (for finding position relative to magnetic north). Smart-phones and related applicatio­ns have revolution­ized our daily lives.

Research is on to put the complete display directly on to the eyeball. The video circuiting would come onto wearable contact lenses, wearing which would enable you to see a continuous context based data feed, which will become routine for navigation and interactin­g with mobile devices. In the medical field, US military researcher­s announced recently they have awarded $40 million toward developing a new kind of brain implant that may help restore memories in wounded soldiers and civilians. The work represents a major scientific leap forward. The hope is that some day, a wireless implantabl­e device would bridge the gaps in an injured brain (physical injury or trauma), making it possible to remember events, places, and context; termed declarativ­e memories. Since year 2000, traumatic brain injuries have affected some 2,70,000 military personnel and on an average touches 1.7 million US civilians annually.

What more of future? The list is endless. But let us take a peek into the sphere of aerospace. Scientists and engineers at BAE Systems have lifted the lid on some futuristic technologi­es that could be incorporat­ed in military and civil aircraft of 2040 or even earlier. The four technologi­es unveiled are: 3D printers so advanced they could print UAVs during a mission; aircraft parts that can heal themselves in minutes; a new type of long range aircraft which divides into a number of smaller aircraft when it reaches its destinatio­n, and a directed energy weapon that could engage missiles at the speed of light, destroy them and protect the people below.

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