@Mike,
Nah that's just circa year 2000 long range surveillance kit from IRAQ
The Military kit I am talking about is based upon true high resolution multi megapixel arrays and stuff that I'll not talk about here
Aurora
@Mike and @Aurora, very cute talking about "
we ordinary mortals".
The increase in resolution is very expensive but does produce 'cleaner' images. In the more affordable cameras running lower resolutions, it is helpful to see some context in the image so that the location of 'areas of interest' may be ascertained. One method of achieving this is using a higher resolution thermal imaging FPA, but these bring with them increased cost. 320x240 resolution FPA's do produce an image that the human brain can correlate with the visible domain in order to localise the area of interest. 80x60 resolution is a little more challenging, especially when working at some distance from the area of interest. The solution is often to move much closed to the target in order to gain a better understanding of the scene.
When I was studying graphics and visual perception in grad school, I learned that
structure from motion is also important -- for example, a spattering of five or ten dots in a still image is unintelligible, but if it's a
moving image of markers attached to an actor's body, you can recognize it almost instantly as a human figure, and often figure out what the human is doing, up to and including emotion.
The much-lamented 9Hz refresh rate is enough to add a great deal of structure-from-motion value in even very low-res IR imaging. I can only imagine (since I can't yet get my hands on the equipment) that that value is even greater with a 30Hz or 60Hz frame rate.