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| Centennial Campus Researcher Wins Acoustics Grant from U.S. NavyImagine a tool that uses sound waves to help identify land mines, roadside bombs or suicide bombers. North Carolina State University has received a grant from the U.S. Office of Naval Research to turn that idea into a reality.
By: Centennial Campus at NC State University “The idea is to develop a tool that will identify things that are unusual,” says Dr. Michael Steer, Lampe Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at NC State and primary investigator of the research effort. “As a result of this work, we hope that one day our soldiers will have pocket-sized devices that can warn them of nearby roadside bombs and suicide bombers. If you’re a Star Trek fan, we’re trying to build a real world tricorder.” NC State is the lead institution in a multi-university collaborative effort that has been awarded $4.3 million over the next three years under a multidisciplinary university research initiative grant from the Office of Naval Research. The grant may be extended for an additional two years and $2.8 million. Other institutions that are part of the research effort are Purdue, Georgia Tech and the Colorado School of Mines. NC State researchers will receive approximately $1.9 million over the first three years of the grant. “We hope to advance our fundamental understanding of how sound interacts with air, soil and solid objects – understanding that can be applied to many different areas,” Steer says. Specifically, Steer explains that the researchers hope to develop the means to use acoustics to identify objects in the environment and make them vibrate or emit energy so that they can be detected using other tools. For example, Steer says, “we think we’ll be able to use sound waves to make land mines vibrate so they can be detected by radar. That would have significant humanitarian applications.” Other NC State researchers involved with the project include Dr. Mohammed Zikry, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, and Dr. Hamid Krim, professor of electrical and computer engineering. NC State’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering are part of the university’s College of Engineering, which is located on Centennial Campus. About Centennial Campus and NC State University Centennial Campus (http://www.centennial.ncsu.edu) is an internationally recognized 1,314-acre research park and technology campus owned and operated by North Carolina University. Home to more than 60 corporate, government and non-profit partners, such as Red Hat, ABB, and the USDA, collaborative research projects vary from nanofibers and secure open systems technology to serious gaming and biomedical engineering. Four university college programs also have a significant presence on campus – College of Engineering, College of Veterinary Medicine, College of Textiles and the College of Education. NC State is one of the top research universities in the country, with expenditures in research approaching more than $325 million annually. The university ranks third among all public universities (without medical schools) in industry-sponsored research expenditures. (http://www.ncsu.edu) End
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