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Alex Preston, SAIC:
Reveal Imaging Achieves Successful Liquid Detection Testing for Aviation
Security Market
Reveal System Exceeds European Civil Aviation Conference (ECAC)
Requirements, Setting the Stage For Enhanced Passenger Screening
January 31, 2012
Reveal
Imaging, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Science Applications International
Corporation has successfully passed laboratory testing and met the
requirements set by the European Civil Aviation Conference (ECAC) for
screening and detecting liquids contained inside passenger baggage.
In the wake of the August 2006 thwarted bombing attempt in London,
travelers have been required to limit the size of liquid containers and
remove them from carry-on bags. Since then, international regulators
have sought to develop rules, technology, procedures, and a timetable to
allow passengers to carry the full spectrum of harmless liquids on
aircraft again. In Europe, the EU Commission has put into place
regulations and standards for equipment used to screen Liquid, Aerosols
and Gels (LAGs), with the goal of allowing liquids back on planes in
April 2013. Compliance with these standards is evaluated by ECAC through
stringent tests carried out by government labs throughout Europe to
measure technology against today's liquid explosive threat. The Concept
of Operations of this equipment is divided into 4 categories (Type A-D)
ranging from directly sampling liquids (Type A) to scanning bags with
liquids inside them (Type D) as travelers did before the liquid ban.
Reveal
Imaging is the first company to pass the most technically challenging
test, Type D, for liquids inside a bag. The test was conducted using the
Reveal dual-energy CT-800 scanner which at the checkpoint is capable of
screening 500 to 600 bags per hour. The testing validated that Reveal
met the even more stringent Standard 2 requirements which require
manufacturers to detect the broadest range of liquid explosives. The
test also demonstrated that Reveal's false alarm rates were
approximately a factor of three below the mandated threshold.
In announcing receipt of ECAC's Type D test validation, Alex Preston,
General Manager of SAIC's Security and Transportation Technology
business unit, said, "Allowing liquids back into bags will substantially
improve operational and economic efficiency for airports throughout
Europe and provide greater convenience for the traveling public. We are
pleased the European Commission established the necessary standards that
will get us there. Passing the Type D test so convincingly with the
proven high-throughput, low false alarm rate CT-800 platform, we believe
will change the landscape of airport screening for years to come." |