Helicopter thermal imaging for detecting insect infested cadavers

Abstract One of the most common techniques applied for searching living and even dead persons is the FLIR (Forward Looking Infrared) system fixed on an aircraft like e.g. a helicopter, visualizing the thermal patterns emitted from objects in the long-infrared spectrum. However, as body temperature c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science & justice 2017-09, Vol.57 (5), p.366-372
Hauptverfasser: Amendt, Jens, Rodner, Sandra, Schuch, Claus-Peter, Sprenger, Heinz, Weidlich, Lars, Reckel, Frank
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract One of the most common techniques applied for searching living and even dead persons is the FLIR (Forward Looking Infrared) system fixed on an aircraft like e.g. a helicopter, visualizing the thermal patterns emitted from objects in the long-infrared spectrum. However, as body temperature cools down to ambient values within approximately 24 h after death, it is common sense that searching for deceased persons can be just applied the first day post-mortem. We postulated that the insect larval masses on a decomposing body generate a heat which can be considerably higher than ambient temperatures for a period of several weeks and that such heat signatures might be used for locating insect infested human remains. We examined the thermal history of two 70 and 90 kg heavy pig cadavers for 21 days in May and June 2014 in Germany. Adult and immature insects on the carcasses were sampled daily. Temperatures were measured on and inside the cadavers, in selected maggot masses and at the surroundings. Thermal imaging from a helicopter using the FLIR system was performed at three different altitudes up to 1500 ft. during seven day-flights and one night-flight. Insect colonization was dominated by blow flies (Diptera: Calliphoridae) which occurred almost immediately after placement of the cadavers. Larvae were noted first on day 2 and infestation of both cadavers was enormous with several thousand larvae each. After day 14 a first wave of post-feeding larvae left the carcasses for pupation. Body temperature of both cadavers ranged between 15 °C and 35 °C during the first two weeks of the experiment, while body surface temperatures peaked at about 45 °C. Maggot masses temperatures reached values up to almost 25 °C above ambient temperature. Detection of both cadavers by thermal imaging was possible on seven of the eight helicopter flights until day 21.
ISSN:1355-0306
1876-4452
DOI:10.1016/j.scijus.2017.04.008