Image sensing in a Naval environment
Joshua Borneman, Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane (United States)
The US Navy utilizes visible and infrared sensing technologies across a diverse range of environments and missions. This talk will provide an overview of the mission space and Naval investments across several technical focus areas for future sensor systems. These include work on large monolithic and tiled focal plane arrays, broadband sensing, sensor processing, novel optical materials and designs, amplified low-light night vision, and others, as well as the trade space driving these investments.
Joshua Borneman the Chief Scientist for Electro-Optics for Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane and in an Acting role as the NAVSEA Distinguished Scientist for Electro-Optics. He is responsible for scientific and technical oversight of Electro-Optic / Infrared imaging systems and research, and for advising Navy and industry regarding research program roadmaps, integrating national strategy objectives with mission gaps and S&T timelines and recommending technical investment directions. He serves as a government subject matter expert for multiple Navy, DARPA, OSD, and ONR programs, and has over 40 Journal publications and presentations and 4 patents. Dr. Borneman received his PhD in 2010 from Purdue University working on nanophotonic metamaterials and nonlinear optics.
This keynote is part of the Image Sensing Technologies: Materials, Devices, Systems, and Applications XIII conference.
Event Details
FORMAT: Presentation followed by audience Q&A.MENU: Coffee, decaf, and tea will be available at the coffee service stations during published times.
SETUP: Classroom and theater style seating.