![]() ![]() Steve and Nick used to work in advertising. “At some point I’m going to be on my deathbed and I’m going to think: what did I do? Did I have fun? We try to do ideas that we’ll be proud of.” Steve says he and his brother didn’t think about uses, pointing out that when Benjamin Franklin witnessed an early hot air balloon flight in the 1770s and was asked what it was good for, he responded: “What good is a newborn baby?” They do things for fun, Steve says. Again, it’s only in infrared light, but I’m thinking that if you don’t want to be detected by one of those thermal imaging cameras police helicopters have, then a thermal camouflage jacket would be very handy. ![]() The next step is to scale down the size of the patches, so that an object can blend into more complex surroundings – a person in a forest, say. The key thing is that the graphene patches can be programmed individually, to emit different levels of thermal radiation, to blend in with the surroundings. Such equipment can be lethally effective for picking out concealed troops and vehicles.Fireproof and windproof … the 100 Year hoodie, as worn by Bear Grylls. Thus, Ukrainian troops have demonstrated an overall edge in night combat, though they too need more night-vision systems. military assistance to Ukraine has focused on provision of night vision equipment goggles, particularly prior to Russia’s 2022 invasion, when transfers of lethal weapons were rare. Some older Russian vehicles still rely on active infrared searchlights, which light up the vehicles using them with potentially fatal results. Since then, Russia had to begin assembling its own devices, a process made much more difficult by the fact than many sources of necessary components are under sanction. The country lost access to those after its first invasion of Ukraine in 2014. Until recently, for example, Russia’s most modern tanks relied on an infrared sight by French company Thales called the Catherine FC. There simply aren’t enough to go around-especially for infantry on foot-and they are of lower quality than those used by Western militaries. ![]() Russia’s calamitous war in Ukraine has illuminated a long-known weakness in the country’s military-a relative deficit in infrared night-vision devices to outfit its troops and vehicles. Ukrainian girl wears a space blanket given by volunteers at the border with Poland in the border crossing of Zosin-Ustyluh, western Ukraine on MaDaniel Leal // Getty Imagesīut mylar also reflects 97 percent of radiated heat, greatly shielding the wearer from infrared sights. Quite a few such blankets or ponchos have been issued to refugees in Ukraine and beyond. That too is a relevant quality, as earlier in the winter of 2022/2023, drone cameras recorded footage of under-equipped Russian soldiers on the frontline freezing to death or incapacitated by hypothermia. Mylar-also known by trade names Melinex and Hostaphan and the scientific term BoPET-is usually most valued for its ability to prevent heat loss. The technique may also be more effective against lower-quality or shorter-range commercial thermal imagers. Still, they stand out far less than a regularly clothed human body, and are undoubtedly much harder to pick out while making a broader area scan. The blankets do still betray a somewhat blotchy contour on thermal imagers. For that matter, some space blankets or tents are advertised on the commercial market for their heat-signature masking properties-you know, just in case you find yourself hunted in the wild by the The Predator. ![]()
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