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Incorporating Thermal Imagers into Routine Patrol
Incorporating Thermal Imagers into Routine PatrolOfficer.com, November 2006
by Jonathan Bastian
Incorporating Thermal Imagers into Routine Patrol
Welcome to a new column that will focus on using thermal imagers (TIs) to enhance police operations, especially patrol work. Each month, I will review how this technology can be employed in practical ways on the street to make your job easier and safer ? in applications ranging from drug activity surveillance to evidence retrieval.
As an author, I am faced with a dilemma. I want to entice you into following this column through the coming months. Yet, this is a technology that few have seen and fewer have used. Before looking at “street-smart” applications for a thermal imager, you must understand the basic technology. While reading about the technical aspects of an unfamiliar device can be as exciting as reading a general order on polishing and maintaining duty boots, please, bear with me; as the series progresses, I promise you will become more engaged.
Thermal imaging is not new to law enforcement. Large agencies have been mounting thermal imagers (TIs) on aircraft for years, using them to assist in surveillance and pursuits. Narcotics officers used TIs to identify potential indoor marijuana growing operations, at least until the Supreme Court placed some restrictions on TI use in the 2001 Kyllo v. US decision. Tactical teams use thermal imagers to gain an additional advantage, especially in low-light or smoky conditions.
The chances are that your agency actually has a thermal imager; it may be locked in a cabinet or buried in a detective’s car trunk, but it’s there. The goal of this column is to encourage you to find that long-lost tool and use it. As you learn how it works and become comfortable with its uses, you may consider expanding the role this technology plays in your normal operations. More frequent use will make your job easier and safer.
What is a Thermal Imager?

The thermal image is generated in tones of black and white. Black is normally the coldest object in the image, white is the hottest and the various shades of gray represent the temperatures in between. Some TIs include a switch that reverses this scheme, placing the TI in a “black hot” mode. “White hot” is the most common mode and could be considered “standard.” A few TIs feature a colorization system that either highlights certain temperatures in certain colors or uses a rainbow pallet instead of a grayscale system. These colorized systems are less common, especially in law enforcement.
Regardless of the color system (white hot or black hot), all of the images are portrayed in a relative scale. That means that something that appears “white hot” in a scene is very hot in comparison to all of the other objects in the scene. For example, a person in an air conditioned room will appear hot on the TI. The same person lying in the desert on a 120 degree day will appear gray in comparison to the hot ground. Because the display is relative, the image requires interpretation. This is a skill that is learned and developed over time with training and practice.
(Note: colorization systems are different. They can be relative, like the black and white systems, or absolute. The absolute color systems assign certain colors based on estimates of the objects’ temperatures. These are complicated systems to use, as their accuracy is affected by many factors outside the user’s control. We can examine these systems and their challenges in a future column should you desire.)
Infrared Principles
Like light, infrared energy is blocked by most materials. However, because infrared energy is a different wavelength from that of light, it does not pass through the same materials. While glass, water and certain plastics are transparent to light, they are frequently opaque to infrared. Conversely, smoke, certain plastics and specific metals that are opaque to light are transparent to infrared. In general, however, both energies are blocked by most materials. As a result, whether using our eyes or a thermal imager, we will “see” the surface of the object we are viewing.
When you use a TI, it is important to remember that you are viewing a heat picture, not an x-ray image. Because certain materials absorb heat, and therefore emit heat, at different rates, sometimes a thermal image will appear to “see through” a surface. In reality, it is seeing temperature differences. In Image 1, it appears that the TI is “seeing through” the drywall of this room and seeing the studs. In reality, the studs are causing the drywall to be a different temperature where they contact it, making the void spaces between them slightly warmer. This temperature difference is detected by the TI, showing you where the studs are located. But you are not “seeing through” the drywall.
Conclusion
Prior to using a thermal imager, we must understand what it does and what its limitations are. The fact that a TI generates a “heat picture” for the officer to interpret is the
basis of all of the applications this column will discuss over the coming months. While I will weave some of this into future articles, rest assured that you have endured the majority of
the technical stuff. Please return next month as this column dives into real-life ways you can use a TI on the streets to make your life easier. After all, no one wants to read another
general order on polishing boots.


