- 24 GHz Sensors: These are used in industrial and simple automotive applications. They offer basic range and speed detection and are cost-effective.
- 60 GHz Sensors: Popular in consumer electronics and smart devices, these sensors are suitable for short-range applications like gesture recognition and people counting.
- 77 GHz Sensors: Widely used in advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS), offering longer range and higher resolution.
- 79 GHz Sensors: These provide ultra-high precision and are suitable for emerging applications like autonomous navigation and security systems.
- Automotive: Utilized in adaptive cruise control, blind-spot detection, and collision avoidance systems, especially in ADAS-equipped vehicles.
- Consumer Electronics: Found in smart TVs, laptops, and home automation for gesture sensing and presence detection.
- Industrial: Deployed in robotics, process automation, and safety monitoring due to their ability to operate in harsh environments.
- Healthcare: Used for vital sign monitoring, fall detection, and elderly care systems, offering non-contact measurement benefits.
- Security and Surveillance: Enable motion detection, perimeter monitoring, and enhanced situational awareness through radar-based sensing.