A US group last year released a free blueprint for a downloadable gun known as the Liberator; it can be used to create 16 components to make a gun that is all-plastic apart from a metal firing pin. The plastic guns can avoid detection when passed through metal detectors and conventional scanners.
The scanner device is being flown for rigorous testing by the US military this week to assess if it can be used to spot explosive devices carried by potential suicide bombers. Pakistan and Venezuela have also shown interest in taking the technology, according to the marketers of the scanner.
Scientists say it has an 80 per cent success rate of identifying weapons. "It measures the shape, size and depth and can tell how symmetrical the object is," said Dr Stuart Harmer, one of the developers at Manchester Metropolitan University. "Handguns and bombs don't look like much else that's carried."
In a demonstration for The Independent this week, researchers showed how the system used high-frequency radio waves to scan a target and translate the radar result through a complex algorithm to assess whether it is a weapon. The user focuses on-screen cross-hairs to run over the target's body and bleeps if it identifies a weapon, including a plastic gun. Scientists say the scanner works best if the target is moving.
- The Independent