Optical sensing and imaging community readies for SPIE Defense and Commercial Sensing
Topics such as infrared, laser, terahertz, multi- and hyperspectral imaging, fiber-optic sensors, and wireless sensing help to drive innovation in sectors as wide-ranging as process monitoring, surveillance, oil and gas exploration, agriculture and crop optimization, pharmaceuticals, healthcare, homeland defense, terrorism countermeasures, robotics, and the Internet of Things. SPIE Defense and Commercial Sensing will bring the global community together on these topics in April in Baltimore.
Sensing and imaging technologies enabling such wide-ranging applications as machine vision, process control, crop productivity, counter-terrorism, and personalized medicine will be advanced at SPIE Defense and Commercial Sensing in the Baltimore (Maryland) Convention Center 17-21 April.
"Over its 40-year lifetime, SPIE Defense and Commercial Sensing has become the communitys leading event on optics and photonics technology, with core topics including infrared cameras, lasers, spectroscopy, 3D imaging, terahertz, and multi- and hyperspectral imaging," said SPIE Senior Director Andrew Brown. "Development of these technologies for defense and security applications stimulates a vital flow of new capabilities for scientific research and new commercial applications -- oil and gas exploration, healthcare, wearable sensors, the Internet of Things, autonomous vehicles, drones employed as mobile sensing platforms, to name a few."
Markets are as wide-ranging as homeland defense, food safety, terrorism countermeasures, machine vision, robotic vision and imaging, precision agriculture, and standoff detection, Brown noted.
A multi-day industry program underscores the drive to commercialization of advanced optical technologies. Presentations will cover topics such as the latest information from the Federal Aviation Agency on flying drones in the U.S., sensor applications from agriculture to pharmaceuticals, target recognition in contested environments, and emerging markets sessions on:
Miniaturization and autonomous vehicles
Hyperspectral imaging for health, agriculture, and food safety
Imaging for machine vision, life sciences, and research applications
ITAR and other international trade regulations.
More than 380 leading industry suppliers and developers will show their latest products and systems in a three-day exhibition. Among exhibiting companies are FLIR Systems, Xenics, Zygo, Thorlabs, Canon USA, Corning, Gooch & Housego, Hamamatsu, Headwall Photonics, and BaySpec.
Two top-level speakers will present plenary talks:
Bradford Tousley, director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Tactical Technology Office
Patrick Carrick, director of the Homeland Security Advanced Research Projects Agency (HSARPA).
The technical programs 56 conferences cover important emerging and established topics, and include featured talks by leading researchers. Among them:
Micro- and Nanotechnology Sensors, Systems, and Applications includes topics such as standoff detection with quantum cascade lasers (QCL), telemedicine, metamaterials and metasurfaces, smart systems for healthcare, and flexible electronics. Featured speakers include:
Ron Poropatich, executive director of the Center for Military Medicine Research, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Denis Wirtz, vice provost for research at Johns Hopkins University
John Rogers, professor and director of the Seitz Materials Research Lab, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Kumar Patel, founder of Pranalytica, Inc.
Naoki Oda, executive engineer of the Radio Application, Guidance and Electro-Optics Division at NEC Corporation.
Ultrafast Bandgap Photonics speakers will present ultrafast-laser-enabled capabilities such as creating new materials (Eric Mazur, Harvard University) and revolutionizing x-ray technology for medicine and security (Henry Kapteyn, Kapteyn-Murnane Labs).
Sensors for Next-Generation Robotics will cover both vision-based optical sensors, such as those used in cameras and lidar systems, and direct-contact and pressure sensors, with applications such as in robot "skin."
Autonomous Air and Ground Sensing Systems for Agricultural Optimization and Phenotyping spotlights photonics technologies as rapidly emerging tools to increase crop productivity and efficiency, with topics such as unmanned autonomous vehicles and spectral imaging devices and cameras for collecting data in research and commercial agricultural settings.
Computational Imaging emphasizes integration of physical optical design and computational post-measurement processing to yield imaging capabilities beyond what conventional imaging can achieve.
Long-Range Imaging will address sensors, optics, systems, processing, and applications related to imaging from distant points, reflecting improvements in sensor systems that extend the distance from which image objects may be imaged.
Accepted conference proceedings papers will be published in the SPIE Digital Library as soon as approved after the meeting, and in print volumes.
More information is at http://www.spie.org/DCS. Sponsor is SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics.
About SPIE
SPIE is the international society for optics and photonics, an educational not-for-profit organization founded in 1955 to advance light-based science, engineering, and technology. The Society serves nearly 264,000 constituents from approximately 166 countries, offering conferences and their published proceedings, continuing education, books, journals, and the SPIE Digital Library in support of interdisciplinary information exchange, professional networking, and patent precedent. In 2015, SPIE provided more than $5.2 million in support of education and outreach programs. http://www.spie.org