Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), sometimes known as drones, can be detected, tracked, and neutralised using a variety of techniques and technologies. Its techniques include physical barriers, electronic jamming, and kinetic ones like bullets or nets. The creation and application of Anti-Drone technology has been motivated by worries about the growing use of drones for nefarious purposes like smuggling, espionage, and terrorism.

To lessen the likelihood of false positives and negatives, it might be required to combine these sensors with machine learning and AI algorithms. Anti-Drone systems can use electro-optical (EO) and infrared (IR) sensors, which integrate many cameras into one device, and install them on stationary objects or moving vehicles. Additionally, UAVs can be located via radar detection. Smaller drones might be challenging for traditional military and aviation radar systems—which are meant to identify large aircraft—to detect or distinguish from other things, such birds.

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