Exelis (booth #2449) has improved the way its CorvusEye 1500 wide-area airborne system processes and analyses the vast amount of data it collects, which is crucial in helping customers make critical decisions. From an altitude of 15,000ft, CorvusEye 1500 provides colour and infrared (IR) imagery of a city-sized area unavailable with comparable airborne systems.
"It's all about context," said Dwight Greenlee, director, regional persistent surveillance, Exelis Geospatial Systems. "Conventional video surveillance systems with their 'soda straw' views can miss critical activities, making it hard to understand what's happening over a wide area. CorvusEye now has real-time analytics that automate certain tasks. For example, users can set 'watch boxes' or 'trip wires' in as many as 10 areas of interest. Users are then alerted if anything moves in or out of that area, and they can automatically track that moving object. Because of the context provided by CorvusEye, users can be more confident in the data to make decisions."
Another new capability in CorvusEye is the ability to cue a second sensor, such as a hyperspectral sensor, to scan a location for certain spectral "signatures" indicating the presence of a material or gas. Analysts also can easily integrate full motion video sensors into the cueing capability. Processing CorvusEye data post-flight provides analysts with a database of all moving objects in the entire scene, allowing them to gather critical forensic intelligence and enabling a better understanding of behaviors and patterns across the region. At AUVSI 2015, visitors can see how users work with the real-time analytics and processed data to search for vehicle tracks based on location and time. At 15in in diameter and weighing less than 95lbs, the CorvusEye turret and sensor package can fit on most midsize unmanned and manned aircraft and uses standard interfaces to swap into virtually any 15-inch airframe mounting location. CorvusEye is exportable to many military, intelligence and security customers around the world.
"It's all about context," said Dwight Greenlee, director, regional persistent surveillance, Exelis Geospatial Systems. "Conventional video surveillance systems with their 'soda straw' views can miss critical activities, making it hard to understand what's happening over a wide area. CorvusEye now has real-time analytics that automate certain tasks. For example, users can set 'watch boxes' or 'trip wires' in as many as 10 areas of interest. Users are then alerted if anything moves in or out of that area, and they can automatically track that moving object. Because of the context provided by CorvusEye, users can be more confident in the data to make decisions."
Another new capability in CorvusEye is the ability to cue a second sensor, such as a hyperspectral sensor, to scan a location for certain spectral "signatures" indicating the presence of a material or gas. Analysts also can easily integrate full motion video sensors into the cueing capability. Processing CorvusEye data post-flight provides analysts with a database of all moving objects in the entire scene, allowing them to gather critical forensic intelligence and enabling a better understanding of behaviors and patterns across the region. At AUVSI 2015, visitors can see how users work with the real-time analytics and processed data to search for vehicle tracks based on location and time. At 15in in diameter and weighing less than 95lbs, the CorvusEye turret and sensor package can fit on most midsize unmanned and manned aircraft and uses standard interfaces to swap into virtually any 15-inch airframe mounting location. CorvusEye is exportable to many military, intelligence and security customers around the world.
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