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Britain's Invisible Tank Adaptiv

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ADAPTIV - A CLOAK OF INVISIBILITY
“If the enemy cannot see you, he cannot fire at you!”
Written by

Corporate Communications
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ADAPTIV – A UNIQUE CAMOUFLAGE SYSTEM



Unlike traditional camouflage systems which rely on paint or nets to hide vehicles, ADAPTIV can instantly blend a vehicle into its background.

Imagine making a tank invisible with a cloaking device that is capable of masking the vehicle’s infrared signature to enemy eyes, and the significant advantages this would hold on the battlefield.

It sounds more like a scene from a Harry Potter movie, but BAE Systems is making the reality possible by developing a unique camouflage system called Adaptiv, that allows a vehicle to blend into its surroundings, effectively becoming invisible to hostile thermal imaging systems.

1352841310777.jpg

With peacekeeping operations now often taking place in deserts, as well as forests and towns all in the same day, Adaptiv is capable of shielding large pieces of military equipment from detection by allowing vehicles to mimic the temperature of their surroundings to suit varying terrain. It can also make a tank look like other objects, such as a cow or a car, or bushes and rocks.



WHO CREATED ADAPTIV?
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Innovation - Adaptiv - Peter Sjolund
Adaptiv was developed and patented in Sweden after FMV and the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration commissioned BAE Systems in Örnsköldsvik to produce full-scale technology for land vehicles to avoid detection from thermal sensor systems.

After three years of challenging research, a project team of seven people, with expertise in the fields of problem solving, software, sensors, electronics and design, developed this unique solution.



HOW THE TECHNOLOGY WORKS
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Innovation Adaptiv - CV90 Close Up

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CV with adaptiv armour
The high tech camouflage system uses modules, which look like cells in a honeycomb to cover the flanks of an armoured vehicle. The modules are made of elements that can be cooled or heated up very quickly as well as controlled individually, allowing different patterns to be created.

The vehicle essentially works like a chameleon, able to mimic its surroundings, or copy other objects such as trucks and cars that can be projected onto the panels from a detailed image bank. The vehicle is also able to signal peaceful intend through flashing text messages across its flank or by creating patterns that can easily be recognized by friendly forces.


THE FUTURE FOR ADAPTIV
620x349.jpg

HKP15b - Helicopter
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Adaptiv - Kopia
The technology could be ready to be put into production in two years primarily for CV90 family of vehicles and in the future used on maritime and air vehicles, which might help to turn a helicopter into a cloud or a warship into a wave.

The pixels can also be resized to achieve stealth at different ranges. For example, larger objects like buildings or warships might not require close-up stealth and may be fitted with larger panels to display a lower resolution image.

Innovation - BAE Systems

@Nihonjin1051 , @Technogaianist , @gambit , @Echo_419 ,@Peter C. Credle , @Penguin , et al. Your thoughts.:enjoy:
 

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I wasn't mentioned in the above list but heck, this being a forum ;)

As Sting famously sang it all depends on how fragile it is!

If it can withstand combat hardship, why not? I'll bet most armies will wait for a combat
operations return of experience before acquiring it en masse for a while, about 5+ years.

Thanks for the news, Tay.
 
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images



940x529.jpg

ADAPTIV - A CLOAK OF INVISIBILITY
“If the enemy cannot see you, he cannot fire at you!”
Written by

Corporate Communications
JUMP TO SECTION

ADAPTIV – A UNIQUE CAMOUFLAGE SYSTEM



Unlike traditional camouflage systems which rely on paint or nets to hide vehicles, ADAPTIV can instantly blend a vehicle into its background.

Imagine making a tank invisible with a cloaking device that is capable of masking the vehicle’s infrared signature to enemy eyes, and the significant advantages this would hold on the battlefield.

It sounds more like a scene from a Harry Potter movie, but BAE Systems is making the reality possible by developing a unique camouflage system called Adaptiv, that allows a vehicle to blend into its surroundings, effectively becoming invisible to hostile thermal imaging systems.

1352841310777.jpg

With peacekeeping operations now often taking place in deserts, as well as forests and towns all in the same day, Adaptiv is capable of shielding large pieces of military equipment from detection by allowing vehicles to mimic the temperature of their surroundings to suit varying terrain. It can also make a tank look like other objects, such as a cow or a car, or bushes and rocks.



WHO CREATED ADAPTIV?
620x349.jpg

Innovation - Adaptiv - Peter Sjolund
Adaptiv was developed and patented in Sweden after FMV and the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration commissioned BAE Systems in Örnsköldsvik to produce full-scale technology for land vehicles to avoid detection from thermal sensor systems.

After three years of challenging research, a project team of seven people, with expertise in the fields of problem solving, software, sensors, electronics and design, developed this unique solution.



HOW THE TECHNOLOGY WORKS
620x349.jpg

Innovation Adaptiv - CV90 Close Up

maxresdefault.jpg

CV with adaptiv armour
The high tech camouflage system uses modules, which look like cells in a honeycomb to cover the flanks of an armoured vehicle. The modules are made of elements that can be cooled or heated up very quickly as well as controlled individually, allowing different patterns to be created.

The vehicle essentially works like a chameleon, able to mimic its surroundings, or copy other objects such as trucks and cars that can be projected onto the panels from a detailed image bank. The vehicle is also able to signal peaceful intend through flashing text messages across its flank or by creating patterns that can easily be recognized by friendly forces.


THE FUTURE FOR ADAPTIV
620x349.jpg

HKP15b - Helicopter
236x133.jpg

Adaptiv - Kopia
The technology could be ready to be put into production in two years primarily for CV90 family of vehicles and in the future used on maritime and air vehicles, which might help to turn a helicopter into a cloud or a warship into a wave.

The pixels can also be resized to achieve stealth at different ranges. For example, larger objects like buildings or warships might not require close-up stealth and may be fitted with larger panels to display a lower resolution image.

Innovation - BAE Systems

@Nihonjin1051 , @Technogaianist , @gambit , @Echo_419 ,@Peter C. Credle , @Penguin , et al. Your thoughts.:enjoy:

If the panels take a hit,will the whole system be rendered ineffective
Also we should get this tech ASAP :enjoy:
 
. . . .
Adaptiv_infrared_camouflage_demo_hiding_tank_as_car.jpg


An armoured vehicle
fitted with 'Adaptiv' infrared side panels, switched off (left), and on to simulate a large car (right), demonstrates both crypsis and mimesis. Adaptiv consists of an array of hexagonal Peltier plates which can be rapidly heated and cooled to form any desired image, such as of the natural background or of a non-target object.BAE likened it to "a thermal TV screen". Infrared cameras continuously gather thermal images of the vehicle's surroundings. The Peltier plate panels are rapidly heated and cooled to match either the temperature of the background, such as a forest, or one of the objects in the thermal cloaking system's "library" such as a truck, car or large rock. The system is able to gather and display thermal images while the vehicle is moving. The result is to "cloak" the vehicle from detection by heat-detecting night vision devices (thermographic camera systems).

Adaptiv - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Infrared camera can spot them
Read the article. Its not about visible range. It is to protect military vehicles from detection by near infrared night vision devices.

Unlike this
US Army developing 'invisibility suit' and will begin trials in 18 months | Daily Mail Online

See also Chinese Military Developing ‘Invisibility Cloak': Multispectral Adaptive Camouflage/Visual Cloaking Technology for Future Chinese Fighter Aircraft and Vehicles and Future Warfare? | DefenseReview.com (DR): An online tactical technology and military defense technology magazine with particular focus on the latest and greatest tactical firearms news (tactical gun news), tactical gear news and tactical shooting news.
 
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I wasn't mentioned in the above list but heck, this being a forum ;)

As Sting famously sang it all depends on how fragile it is!

If it can withstand combat hardship, why not? I'll bet most armies will wait for a combat
operations return of experience before acquiring it en masse for a while, about 5+ years.

Thanks for the news, Tay.

Hopefully it can soon be integrated in our MIGHTY Type 45 destroyers. That will make them even more deadly.:)
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Type-45-Destroyer-DUNCAN-Departs-on-Sea-Trials.jpg
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ahhhh..... I can just imagine adaptiv with this.:woot:
 

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Hopefully it can soon be integrated in our MIGHTY Type 45 destroyers.

Type 45s are real ships for sure but judging by the first image right below,
how would displaying ship size red griffins/heraldic lions make them safer??? :o: o_O

:jester: Good evening mate, Tay.
 
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Type 45s are real ships for sure but judging by the first image right below,
how would displaying ship size red griffins/heraldic lions make them safer??? :o: o_O

:jester: Good evening mate, Tay.

Loool ahahahhaha.....well that is HMS DRAGON. Maybe explains why. :)
 
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This goes even a step further than Adaptiv.
Breakthrough in cloaking technology grabs military's attention

Boubacar Kante, a professor at the University of California-San Diego, and his colleagues tested the first effective "dielectric metasurface cloak." That's a fancy way of describing a super-thin, non-metal material that manipulates electromagnetic waves, including visible light and radio waves.
Those electromagnetic waves and how they come off an object are crucial to the ability to detect it. Radar can't detect a plane without radio waves bouncing back to a receiver, and seeing requires light bouncing off an object and passing into your eyeball. Manipulating those waves could, in theory, prevent detection, and in certain conditions, Kante said he can do that.
Breakthrough in cloaking technology grabs military's attention
 
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