Radio waves readily travel through smoke and glass, making them impervious to conditions that wouldn't be safe for human eyes and to the shiny surfaces that make up many retail and office buildings.
PanoRadar by Penn Engineering uses radio waves to give robots high-resolution 3D vision, surpassing traditional sensors in ...
Researchers at the University of Minnesota have created a groundbreaking technique that transforms 2D radio images into 3D ...
The better robots can see, the better they can interpret their surroundings. Where conventional sensors fail, radio waves and ...
Researchers using the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) radio telescope in Europe have discovered the second generation of Starlink satellites emit higher levels of radio waves that could pose a serious ...
In the race to build robots that can navigate any environment, scientists have faced a big challenge: traditional vision ...