Rensselaer Researcher Gets Firsthand View of Behind-the-Scenes Military TechnologyEngineering professor Rich Radke participates in
prestigious DARPA program
Troy, N.Y. — It’s not every day an engineering professor
gets to rub elbows with top military brass, watch from a few
meters away as three F-15 fighter jets refuel in mid air, and
stroll through a “petting zoo” of Cold War era Soviet machines
of war.
ECSE Professor Rich Radke sits in the
cockpit of a KC-135 Stratotanker refueling jet in June,
during the second of four behind-the-scenes tours of U.S.
military facilities he participated in as part of the
Department of Defense's 2007 Computer Science Study
Panel.
Photo Credit: Rensselaer/Richard Radke
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But these adventures are only a sprinkling of what Richard
Radke, a newly tenured professor in Rensselaer’s Department of
Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering, experienced
while touring the country’s military facilities as part of the
Department of Defense’s Computer Science Study Panel.
Radke was one of a dozen researchers to participate in the
2007 CS Study Panel, a competitive program administered by the
Institute for Defense Analyses for the DoD’s Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency (DARPA). The training program aims to
support university research in computer science and related
fields, while informing a new generation of researchers about
the needs and priorities of the nation’s defense agencies.
The multi-year program familiarizes up-and-coming faculty
from American universities with DoD practices, challenges, and
risks. Participants are encouraged to view their own research
through this new perspective, and then to explore and develop
technologies that have the potential to transition innovative
and revolutionary computer science and technology advances to
the government.
“The basic idea is to expose young faculty to Department of
Defense-related activities, via briefings by military and
intelligence officers and ‘field trips’ to military and
industrial bases,” Radke said. “It is truly a hard-core
experience filled with days of interesting briefings and
up-close show-and-tell with vehicles and equipment.”
The program lasts about 20 days, split up into four
sessions. In April, Radke and the group visited facilities
around Washington, including the National Military Command
Center at the Pentagon. The second trip took Radke to the U.S.
Joint Forces Command in Norfolk, Va., Langley Air Base, and the
Naval Network Warfare Command — where Radke toured the guided
missile cruiser USS Monterey, the huge landing helicopter
assault ship USS Nassau, and the nuclear attack submarine USS
Albany.
Other highlights of the second session included a jump from
the 34-foot training tower at the Advanced Airborne School at
Ft. Bragg in Fayetteville, N.C., along with lying down in the
back of a KC-135 transport jet and watching three nearby F-15
fighter jets refuel in mid-air.
In July, the third session included tours of Lockheed
Martin’s Advanced Development Program, Northrop Grumman, the
North American Aerospace Defense Command, and Edwards Air Force
Base, which is the U.S. Air Force’s main site for fighter jet
testing, test pilot education, and flight research. Other stops
included the Nevada Test and Training Range and Nellis Air
Force Base. One section of Nellis featured a threat training
facility, called the “Petting Zoo,” filled with foreign tanks,
missile launchers, helicopters, planes, and other equipment.
Radke said the U.S. military studied the captured equipment to
discover ways of exploiting its design quirks and
weaknesses.
So far, Radke has visited seven of the nation’s nine
military combatant commands. The fourth session, to take place
in October, will include visits to the Central Intelligence
Agency, National Security Agency, National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and other high-level security
organizations.
In addition to traveling on military aircraft, sleeping in
military lodging and eating military food — which, according to
Radke’s blog, is quite tasty — the professor met dozens of
military personnel, as well as former officers who lead and
work for the Institute for Defense Analyses. These connections
will be beneficial as Radke moves forward developing and
submitting a proposal to DARPA for applying his computer vision
research toward new defense applications.
“Traveling with these people really opens up doors at places
you visit,” Radke said. Plus, the experience afforded him a
greater appreciation for the efforts of men and women in the
U.S. military whose job is to keep the country secure.
“Understanding what these people do on a day-to-day basis, you
can’t help but be impressed.”
Radke and other CS Study Panel participants will submit
their proposals in November, and successful projects will be
eligible for further funding and DARPA support. Radke is
planning to leverage his current research of combining laser
range scanning with high-definition digital photography to
create algorithms that can make reasoned decisions about 3-D
objects in complex environments. Combing the two complementary
technologies in a smart way will enable fast, robust
decision-making and 3-D view synthesis that could be used in a
number of defense, intelligence, and surveillance applications
useful to the military, Radke said.
Radke’s blogs, which include a wealth of photos, can be
found at:
http://www.ecse.rpi.edu/~rjradke/pics/cssg2/cssg2.html and
http://www.ecse.rpi.edu/~rjradke/pics/cssg3/cssg3.html.
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Published
September 17,
2007 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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