Gravimetric Radar: Gravity-Based Detection of a Point-Mass Moving in a Static Background
Emmanuel David Tannenbaum

TL;DR
This paper proposes a gravity-based detection method for moving objects like stealth aircraft and missiles using highly sensitive gravimetric devices, leveraging quantum interference to improve detection capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces a novel gravity-based triangulation approach for detecting moving masses and discusses the design of quantum-enhanced gravimetric detectors.
Findings
Feasibility depends on developing detectors 4-5 orders more sensitive than current technology.
Quantum interference effects could enable the required sensitivity.
Atmospheric disturbances and noise must be characterized for practical implementation.
Abstract
This paper discusses a novel approach for detecting moving massive objects based on the time variation that these objects produce in the local gravitational field measured by several detectors. Such an approach may provide a viable method for detecting stealth aircraft, UAVs, cruise, and ballistic missiles. By inverting a set of nonlinear algebraic equations, it is possible to use the time variation in the gravitational fields to compute the mass, position, and velocity of one or more moving objects. The approach is essentially a gravity-based form of triangulation. Based on order-of-magnitude calculations, we estimate that under realistic scenarios, this approach will be feasible if it is possible to design gravimetric devices that are four to five order of magnitude more sensitive than current devices. To achieve such a level of sensitivity, we suggest designing detectors that exploit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
