In the 1930s, U.S. Navy researchers stumbled upon the concept of
radar when they noticed that a plane flying past a radio tower reflected
radio waves. Scientists have now applied that same principle to make
the first device that tracks existing Wi-Fi signals to spy on people
through walls.
Wi-Fi radio signals are found in 61 percent of homes in the U.S. and
25 percent worldwide, so Karl Woodbridge and Kevin Chetty, researchers
at University College London, designed their detector to use these
ubiquitous signals. When a radio wave reflects off a moving object, its
frequency changes—a phenomenon called the Doppler effect. Their radar
prototype identifies frequency changes to detect moving objects. It’s
about the size of a suitcase and contains a radio receiver composed of
two antennas and a signal-processing unit. In tests, they have used it
to determine a person’s location, speed and direction—even through a
one-foot-thick brick wall. Because the device itself doesn’t emit any
radio waves, it can’t be detected.
Wi-Fi radar could have domestic applications ranging from spotting
intruders to unobtrusively monitoring children or the elderly. It could
also have military uses: The U.K. Ministry of Defence has funded a study
to determine whether it could be used to scan buildings during urban
warfare. With improvements, Woodbridge says, the device could become
sensitive enough to pick up on subtle motions the ribcage makes during
breathing, which would allow the radar to detect people who are standing
or sitting still.
See image above for how it'll work.
1. MOVING SUBJECT
When Wi-Fi radio waves bounce off a moving object, their frequency changes. If, for example, a person is moving toward the Wi-Fi source, the reflected waves’ frequency increases. If a person is moving away from the source, the frequency decreases.
When Wi-Fi radio waves bounce off a moving object, their frequency changes. If, for example, a person is moving toward the Wi-Fi source, the reflected waves’ frequency increases. If a person is moving away from the source, the frequency decreases.
2. REGULAR OL' ROUTER
A Wi-Fi Internet router already in the room fills the area with radio waves of a specific frequency, usually 2.4 or 5 gigahertz.
A Wi-Fi Internet router already in the room fills the area with radio waves of a specific frequency, usually 2.4 or 5 gigahertz.
3. BASELINE SIGNAL
One antenna of the radar system tracks the baseline radio signal in the room.
One antenna of the radar system tracks the baseline radio signal in the room.
4. SHIFTED SIGNAL
A second antenna detects radio waves that have reflected off of moving objects, which changes their frequency.
A second antenna detects radio waves that have reflected off of moving objects, which changes their frequency.
5. PERP, SPOTTED
By comparing the two antennas’ signals, the computer calculates the object’s location to within a few feet as well as its speed and direction.
By comparing the two antennas’ signals, the computer calculates the object’s location to within a few feet as well as its speed and direction.
BREATHE EASY

Breathe Easy:
It’s possible to detect a person’s breathing rate
by surrounding him with radio waves. Neal Patwari’s wireless
engineering group at the University of Utah designed a network of 20
inexpensive radio transmitters that are placed around a patient’s bed.
Then they created an algorithm that detects a stationary person’s
breaths better than current detectors do. Patwari plans to upgrade the
algorithm by the end of the year to filter out body movements too. The
system could someday be used in hospitals in place of tubes and masks.
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