When a building collapses, a wildfire breaches containment, or a chemical plant erupts — the first 72 hours determine survival outcomes. Human responders face lethal conditions. Aerosyn systems go in first.
First responders are among the bravest people on earth. They are also human — constrained by biology, fatigue, and the physics of self-preservation. A firefighter cannot enter a 900°C structural collapse. A rescue diver cannot work in a sewage-flooded basement for six hours. A hazmat team cannot safely enter a building with unknown chemical concentrations.
These limitations aren't failures of courage. They're hard physical limits. Every year, emergency situations go unaddressed because the cost of sending humans is too high — or because the window closes before resources arrive.
Aerosyn systems eliminate these constraints. They enter environments that would kill a human in seconds, operate for hours without fatigue, and relay real-time data so human responders can make better decisions from a safe distance.
Purpose-configured systems for the four primary disaster response scenarios.
Compact form-factor robots that navigate rubble fields, squeeze through voids inaccessible to humans, and deploy acoustic, thermal, and chemical sensors to locate survivors. Communicate position data in real time to surface command.
Ground and aerial systems operating ahead of the fire line — creating firebreaks, applying suppressant, and providing real-time fire behavior data to incident command. Thermal-hardened for direct flame contact up to 1,200°C for short durations.
Full CBRN-rated systems for hazardous material environments — identifying unknown compounds, containing spills, and operating in environments that would require Level A protection for human responders. Decontaminates on exit.
Amphibious systems operating in flood-submerged environments — navigating debris-filled water, locating survivors on rooftops and in flooded structures, and providing extraction assistance. Operates in zero visibility underwater conditions.
We work with fire departments, FEMA, municipal emergency management, and private emergency response contractors. Contact us to discuss system configuration and deployment requirements.