Japan to develop drones to monitor radiation

June 13, 2012

Talat Zaki Hafiz

Rifle-carrying Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (GSDF) troops in camouflage march in an urban area of Tokyo’s Itabashi Ward as part of their training as rangers, Tuesday. It was the first time troops marched through urban areas of Tokyo in 42 years, since the last such occasion which took place in 1970, according to the GSDF. — ReutersTokyo — Japan’s atomic energy authority and the country’s space agency Tuesday announced a joint project to develop a drone to measure radioactivity in the environment after last year’s nuclear disaster.

Japan has been forced to invent or improve systems for measuring radioactive contamination since a 9.0-magnitude quake and tsunami in March 2011 sparked the world’s worst nuclear crisis in a generation at the Fukushima atomic plant.

Remote-controlled helicopters have been used but are not suitable for remote and mountainous territory as they have to fly low and the operator has to be able to see the aircraft, the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) said.

But unmanned aircraft could fly at higher altitudes over potentially contaminated areas, resolving the issue. — AFP


June 13, 2012
HIGHLIGHTS
SAUDI ARABIA
8 minutes ago

Saudi Arabia publishes new law allowing foreigners to own property

SAUDI ARABIA
33 minutes ago

Over 424,000 Saudis enroll in AI training as SDAIA scales national transformation

Life
hour ago

Female HR exec resigns after viral Coldplay concert embrace with CEO