<An assistant referee calls an offside offense, and the forever-controversial VAR offside line>
(1) Cutting-edge tracking technology: the 12 tracking cameras under the roof of the stadium monitor the motion of the ball and the players.
(2) Human-motion recognition technology: the movement of joints of each player is identified on 29 data points. The data is sent to the VAR control room immediately when a part of the body crosses the offside line, without having to attach separate sensors on the players’ bodies.
(3) IMU/UWB sensor technology: at the core of the Al Rihla Pro Ball, meaning ‘journey’ in Arabic, are an inertial measurement unit (IMU) that traces even the slightest of movements, as well as an ultra-wideband (UWB) sensor which transmits data more precisely than GPS or Bluetooth. The two sensors check the movement of the ball at the frequency of 500 times a second and send the data to the VAR control room, helping the referee pinpoint the of kicks. Even when the ball is replaced during a game, its back-end system fetches the data of the new ball without requiring human interception. When fully charged wirelessly, the sensors can work for up to 6 hours, allowing the ball to transmit data for the entire duration of the game.
<Designed by KINEXON, the Al Rihla has a 14g set of sensors in its core>
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