Sample records for army weapon systems

  1. US Army Weapon Systems Human-Computer Interface (WSHCI) style guide, Version 1

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Avery, L.W.; O`Mara, P.A.; Shepard, A.P.

    1996-09-30

    A stated goal of the U.S. Army has been the standardization of the human computer interfaces (HCIS) of its system. Some of the tools being used to accomplish this standardization are HCI design guidelines and style guides. Currently, the Army is employing a number of style guides. While these style guides provide good guidance for the command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence (C4I) domain, they do not necessarily represent the more unique requirements of the Army`s real time and near-real time (RT/NRT) weapon systems. The Office of the Director of Information for Command, Control, Communications, and Computers (DISC4), in conjunctionmore » with the Weapon Systems Technical Architecture Working Group (WSTAWG), recognized this need as part of their activities to revise the Army Technical Architecture (ATA). To address this need, DISC4 tasked the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) to develop an Army weapon systems unique HCI style guide. This document, the U.S. Army Weapon Systems Human-Computer Interface (WSHCI) Style Guide, represents the first version of that style guide. The purpose of this document is to provide HCI design guidance for RT/NRT Army systems across the weapon systems domains of ground, aviation, missile, and soldier systems. Each domain should customize and extend this guidance by developing their domain-specific style guides, which will be used to guide the development of future systems within their domains.« less

  2. U.S. Army weapon systems human-computer interface style guide. Version 2

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Avery, L.W.; O`Mara, P.A.; Shepard, A.P.

    1997-12-31

    A stated goal of the US Army has been the standardization of the human computer interfaces (HCIs) of its system. Some of the tools being used to accomplish this standardization are HCI design guidelines and style guides. Currently, the Army is employing a number of HCI design guidance documents. While these style guides provide good guidance for the command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence (C4I) domain, they do not necessarily represent the more unique requirements of the Army`s real time and near-real time (RT/NRT) weapon systems. The Office of the Director of Information for Command, Control, Communications, and Computers (DISC4),more » in conjunction with the Weapon Systems Technical Architecture Working Group (WSTAWG), recognized this need as part of their activities to revise the Army Technical Architecture (ATA), now termed the Joint Technical Architecture-Army (JTA-A). To address this need, DISC4 tasked the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) to develop an Army weapon systems unique HCI style guide, which resulted in the US Army Weapon Systems Human-Computer Interface (WSHCI) Style Guide Version 1. Based on feedback from the user community, DISC4 further tasked PNNL to revise Version 1 and publish Version 2. The intent was to update some of the research and incorporate some enhancements. This document provides that revision. The purpose of this document is to provide HCI design guidance for the RT/NRT Army system domain across the weapon systems subdomains of ground, aviation, missile, and soldier systems. Each subdomain should customize and extend this guidance by developing their domain-specific style guides, which will be used to guide the development of future systems within their subdomains.« less

  3. Operating and Support Costing Guide: Army Weapon Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1974-12-23

    First US Army 1 Commandant, US Army Logistics Management Center (Director Administration and Services) 2 Commander, US Army Management Systems Support...Army Logistics Management Center (Director, Administration and Services) Commander, US Army Management Systems Support Agency (DACS-AME) Commander

  4. The health hazard assessment process in support of joint weapon system acquisitions.

    PubMed

    Kluchinsky, Timothy A; Jokel, Charles R; Cambre, John V; Goddard, Donald E; Batts, Robert W

    2013-01-01

    Since 1981, the Army's HHA Program has provided an invaluable service to combat developers and materiel program managers by providing recommendations designed to eliminate or control health hazards associated with materiel and weapon systems. The program has consistently strived to improve its services by providing more meaningful and efficient assistance to the acquisition community. In the uncertain fiscal times ahead, the Army's HHA Program will continue to provide valuable and cost-effective solutions to mitigate the health risks of weapons systems.

  5. Estimating Manpower, Personnel, and Training Requirements Early in the Weapon System Acquisition Process: An Application of the HARDMAN Methodology to the Army’s Division Support Weapon System

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-02-01

    identifies the supply of personnel and training resources that can be expected at critical dates in the conceptual weapon system’s acquisition schedule...impact analysis matches demand to supply and identifies shortfalls in skills, new skill requirements, and high resource drivers. The tradeoff analysis...system. Step 5 - Conduct Impact Analysis The Impact Analysis determines the Army’s supply of those personnel and training resources required by the

  6. Technical analysis of US Army Weapons Systems and related advanced technologies of military interest. Final report

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    NONE

    1991-06-14

    This report summarizes the activities and accomplishments of an US Army technology security project designed to identify and develop effective policy guidelines for militarily critical technologies in specific Army systems and in broad generic technology areas of military interest, Individual systems analyses are documented in separate Weapons Systems Technical Assessments (WSTAs) and the general generic technology areas are evaluated in the Advanced Technology Assessment Reports (ATARs), However, specific details of these assessments are not addressed here, only recommendations regarding aspects of the defined approach, methodology, and format are provided and discussed.

  7. Technology resource document for the assembled chemical weapons assessment environmental impact statement. Vol. 5 : assembled systems for weapons destruction at Blue Grass Army Depot.

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kimmell, T.; Folga, S., Frey, G.; Molberg, J.

    2001-05-02

    This volume of the Technical Resource Document (TRD) for the ''Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Design, Construction and Operation of One or More Pilot Test Facilities for Assembled Chemical Weapons Destruction Technologies at One or More Sites'' (PMACWA 2001g) pertains to the destruction of assembled chemical weapons (ACW) stored in the U.S. Army's unitary chemical stockpile at Blue Grass Army Depot (BGAD), located outside Richmond, Kentucky. This volume presents technical and process information on each of the destruction technologies applicable to treatment of the specific ACW stored at BGAD. The destruction technologies described are those that have been demonstratedmore » as part of the Assembled Chemical Weapons Assessment (ACWA) selection process (see Volume 1).« less

  8. U.S. Army High Energy Laser (HEL) technology program

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lavan, Michael J.; Wachs, John J.

    2011-11-01

    The US Army is investing in Solid State Laser (SSL) technology to assess counter rocket, artillery, and mortar (C-RAM) and counter unmanned aerial vehicle (C-UAV) capabilities of solid state based HEL systems, as well as other potential applications for HELs of interest to the Army. The Army HEL program thrust areas are systematically moving the technology forward toward weaponization, including solid state laser technologies, advances in beam control technology, and conducting major demonstrations. The High Energy Laser Mobile Demonstrator (HELMD) will be a major step toward demonstrating HEL weapon capability to the soldier. The US Army will continue to pursue technologies that enable more compact systems compatible with, for example, a Stryker tactical vehicle as a crucial part of our strategy to provide a capability to the warfighter that can maneuver with the force.

  9. Technology resource document for the assembled chemical weapons assessment environmental impact statement. Vol. 2 : assembled systems for weapons destruction at Anniston Army Depot.

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kimmell, T.; Folga, S., Frey, G.; Molberg, J.

    2001-05-04

    This volume of the Technical Resource Document (TRD) for the ''Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Design, Construction and Operation of One or More Pilot Test Facilities for Assembled Chemical Weapons Destruction Technologies at One or More Sites'' (PMACWA 2001g) pertains to the destruction of assembled chemical weapons (ACW) stored at Anniston Army Depot (ANAD), located outside Anniston, Alabama. This volume presents technical and process information on each of the destruction technologies applicable to treatment of the specific ACW stored at ANAD. The destruction technologies described are those that have been demonstrated as part of the Assembled Chemical Weapons Assessmentmore » (ACWA) selection process (see Volume 1).« less

  10. System Error Budgets, Target Distributions and Hitting Performance Estimates for General-Purpose Rifles and Sniper Rifles of 7.62 x 51 mm and Larger Calibers

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-05-01

    CLASSIFICATION AUTPOVITY 3. DISTRIBUTION IAVAILABILITY OF REPORT 2b. P OCLASSIFICATION/OOWNGRADING SC14DULE Approved for public release; distribution 4...in the Red Book should obtain a copy of the Engineering Design Handbook, Army Weapon System Analysis, Part One, DARCOM- P 706-101, November 1977; a...companion volume: Army Weapon System Analysis, Part Two, DARCOM- P 706-102, October 1979, also makes worthwhile study. Both of these documents, written by

  11. A Requirements Analysis for Primary Care at Womack Army Medical Center

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2006-06-16

    posed by threats such as weapons of mass destruction and terrorism (Army Transformation Plan, 2001). The Army Transformation Plan revising European...Health Systems Specialist for Clark Health Clinic, Expansion Plan 14 personal comunication , May 2006) . Robinson Health Clinic supports the 8 2 nd

  12. Use of army weapons and private firearms for suicide and homicide in the region of Basel, Switzerland.

    PubMed

    Frei, A; Han, A; Weiss, M G; Dittmann, V; Ajdacic-Gross, V

    2006-01-01

    Switzerland has one of the highest rates of firearm suicides in the world. International studies show a positive correlation between the rate of households with guns and femicides with guns. Because its defense system requires a militia to keep personal firearms at home, Switzerland has a high rate of households with a gun. Records of suicides in the region of Basel between 1992 and 1996 were reviewed. Suicides with either army weapons or private firearms and suicides by other means were compared. Methods and types of homicides that occurred in the region at the same time were also analyzed. Firearm suicides were clearly the most frequent means of suicide. They were also used in 30.0% of domestic homicides, although other means were used at similar rates. Firearms for suicide were mainly used by men, especially army weapons. These men were younger, professionally better qualified, and fewer had ever been treated in one of the local state psychiatric services. The use of firearms for suicide, rather than homicide, and particularly of army weapons by young, well-educated men, requires more attention in debates and informed policy regarding access to firearms and suicide prevention in Switzerland.

  13. Army Airmobility Handbook

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1967-03-01

    is restricted only by the practical range of its organic aerial vehicles which provide its high degree of mobility; a form of warfare that not only... ORGANIC AIRCRAFT RADIOS 1* Chapter and Appendix. APPENDIX 4 ARMY AIRCRAFT WEAPONS SYSTEMS APPENDIX 5 ARMY AVIATION ORGANIZATIONS IL. APPENDIX 6 AIRMOBILE...helicopters, fix,:d wing aircraft, and organizations and equipment associatetd with Army aviation. It provides basic and general information, and

  14. XM25 Schedule Delays, Cost Increases, and Performance Problems Continue, and Procurement Quantity Not Justified (REDACTED)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-08-29

    ammunition. (FOUO) Figure 1. XM25 Weapon System and Air Bursting Ammunition 3 Hidden refers to the enemy seeking cover in trenches; behind walls, rocks ...system that fires 25mm high-explosive, air- bursting ammunition to allow soldiers to fire at hidden enemy targets. Findings Army officials could...XM25 Weapon System The XM25 is a semiautomatic, shoulder-fired weapon system that fires 25mm high-explosive, air- bursting ammunition to allow soldiers

  15. Assuring structural integrity in Army systems

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    1985-01-01

    The object of this study was to recommend possible improvements in the manner in which structural integrity of Army systems is assured. The elements of a structural integrity program are described, and relevant practices used in various industries and government organizations are reviewed. Some case histories of Army weapon systems are examined. The mandatory imposition of a structural integrity program patterned after the Air Force Aircraft Structural Integrity Program is recommended and the benefits of such an action are identified.

  16. Estimating the Manpower, Personnel, and Training Requirements of the Army’s Corps Support Weapon System Using the HARDMAN Methodology

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-09-01

    Description 24 3-4 System Analysis 26 3-5 CSWS Fire Control System 40 3-6 Hybrid Collective Protection Equipment 46 4-1 Macrit Calculation 50 4-2...suppression. The U.S. Army Chemical Laboratory, Aberdeen Proving Grounds, is developing hybrid collective protection equipment (HCPE) to provide NBC...Washington, DC: Department of the Army, 15 January 1981. Hybrid collective protection equipment (HCPE) application guidelines. Clearwater, FL

  17. The United States Army 1996 Modernization Plan.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1996-03-08

    and a cadre of operations, intelligence, fire support, air defense, and nuclear, biological, and chemical warfare personnel. As required, ARSPACE will...aerial and stand-off chemical and biological detection systems. " Decontamination improvements include Modular Decontamination System fielding in the near... Chemical . As many as 25 nations are producing and stockpiling chemical weapons. Weapons systems from mortars to missiles can deliver chemical warfare (CW

  18. Educating the Army of 2010: A Strategic Plan

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-02-20

    States have been identified by futurist John Naisbitt, in his books Megatrends : Ten New Directions Transforming Our Lives and Megatrends 2000. Several...information and equipment. - The proliferation of weapons will continue, including chemical, biological , and nuclear weapons. Despite the reduction of...conventional systems as well as biological and chemical weapons of mass destruction. Nuclear technology will be more common, both as a source of

  19. CALS Baseline Architecture Analysis of Weapons System. Technical Information: Army, Draft. Volume 8

    DOT National Transportation Integrated Search

    1989-09-01

    This effort was performed to provide a common framework for analysis and planning of CALS initiatives across the military services, leading eventually to the development of a common DoD-wide architecture for CALS. This study addresses Army technical ...

  20. Mammalian Toxicology Testing: Problem Definition Study, Global Army Toxicology Requirements.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-03-01

    Electronic Warfare Equipment (D251) Tactical ECK System (64750A) Protective Electronic Warfare Equipment (D540) High Energy Electromagnetic Radiation...Fighting Portable Weapon (for IFV) Smoke Grenade Launcher Staff Smart, Target-Activated Fire-and-Forget Tactical ECK System (63755A) Protective Electronic...Warfare Equipment (D251) Tactical ECK System (64750A) Protective Electronic Warfare Equipment (D540) High Energy Electromagnetic Radiation Weapons (e.g

  1. Emergency preparedness among people living near US army chemical weapons sites after September 11, 2001.

    PubMed

    Williams, Bryan L; Magsumbol, Melina S

    2007-09-01

    We examined trust in the army and perceptions of emergency preparedness among residents living near the Anniston, Ala, and Richmond, Ky, US Army chemical weapons stockpile sites shortly after September 11, 2001. Residents (n = 655) living near the 2 sites who participated in a cross-sectional population were relatively unprepared in the event of a chemical emergency. The events of September 11 gave rise to concerns regarding the security of stored chemical weapons and the sites' vulnerability to terrorist attacks. Although residents expressed trust in the army to manage chemical weapons safely, only a few expressed a desire to actively participate in site decisions. Compliance with procedures during emergencies could be seriously limited, putting residents in these sites at higher levels of risk of exposure to chemical hazards than nonresidents.

  2. Emergency Preparedness Among People Living Near US Army Chemical Weapons Sites After September 11, 2001

    PubMed Central

    Williams, Bryan L.; Magsumbol, Melina S.

    2007-01-01

    We examined trust in the army and perceptions of emergency preparedness among residents living near the Anniston, Ala, and Richmond, Ky, US Army chemical weapons stockpile sites shortly after September 11, 2001. Residents (n = 655) living near the 2 sites who participated in a cross-sectional population were relatively unprepared in the event of a chemical emergency. The events of September 11 gave rise to concerns regarding the security of stored chemical weapons and the sites’ vulnerability to terrorist attacks. Although residents expressed trust in the army to manage chemical weapons safely, only a few expressed a desire to actively participate in site decisions. Compliance with procedures during emergencies could be seriously limited, putting residents in these sites at higher levels of risk of exposure to chemical hazards than nonresidents. PMID:17666684

  3. The evolution of a health hazard assessment database management system for military weapons, equipment, and materiel.

    PubMed

    Murnyak, George R; Spencer, Clark O; Chaney, Ann E; Roberts, Welford C

    2002-04-01

    During the 1970s, the Army health hazard assessment (HHA) process developed as a medical program to minimize hazards in military materiel during the development process. The HHA Program characterizes health hazards that soldiers and civilians may encounter as they interact with military weapons and equipment. Thus, it is a resource for medical planners and advisors to use that can identify and estimate potential hazards that soldiers may encounter as they train and conduct missions. The U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine administers the program, which is integrated with the Army's Manpower and Personnel Integration program. As the HHA Program has matured, an electronic database has been developed to record and monitor the health hazards associated with military equipment and systems. The current database tracks the results of HHAs and provides reporting designed to assist the HHA Program manager in daily activities.

  4. Global Operations and Biometrics: Next Generation Capabilities and Policy Implications

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-04-01

    could help identify individuals likely to have handled certain chemical, biological or radiological precursor substances associated with weapons of...or biologic weapon production or storage site. See U.S. Department of the Army, Site Exploitation Operations, Army Field Manual FM 3-90.15...and nuclear) forces and shifting increasingly toward the non-nation state actors organized as networked violent extremists, often seeking weapons of

  5. US Army Proposed Automatic Test Equipment Software Development and Support Facility.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-10-29

    programs would be prepared as weapon and prime system operating software. The ATE Software Development and Support Facility will help prevent the TPS...ONE AS A STANDARD **Partially being Developed (2) UNDER DEVELOP- by Navy CSS Prgram MENT (3) NEEDS TAILOR- (5) NEEDS ING FOR ARMY DEVELOPMENT A- 2

  6. Army Research Laboratory (ARL) 2009 Annual Review

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-01-01

    shooting performance simulator with a high - speed weapon tracking system that provides real-time continuous weapon aim point data . This 13-acre...HMMVV’s (humvees), helicopter and plane parts and in new Navy DDX and DDG ships . As a result of the high performance and low weight of composite...improve Soldier-system performance . a high -resolution understanding of the Soldier’s Dr. Laurel Allender Director for Human Research and

  7. Optimizing the Sustainment of U.S. Army Weapon Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-03-17

    Current Military Rank/Civilian Grade ................................................................................ 33 Figure 9: Education Level...across the military services from lows experienced in the wake of fiscal year 2013 sequestration when only 2 Army non-missioned brigade combat teams...committee notes that recovery from these ebbs in readiness has taken time, with most military services reporting a return to pre-sequester levels of

  8. In-Flight Performance Evaluation of Experimental Information Displays

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1979-05-01

    Chemical Systems Laboratory Experimentation Command Aberden Proving Ground ,MD Technical Library 21010 (1) Box 22 Fort Ord, CA 93941 (1) 21 US Amy Materiel...US Army Missile R&D Command Library, Bldg 3071 Redstone Arsenal, AL 35809 (1) ATTN: ATSL-DOSL Aberdeen Proving Ground , MD US Army Yuma Proving Ground ...Systems Chief Analysis Agency Benet Weapons Laboratory ATTN: Reports Distribution LCWSL, USA ARRADCOH Aberdeen Proving Ground , MD ATTN: DRDAR-LCB-TL

  9. 2010 Annual Report (National Defense Center for Energy and Environment)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-01-01

    a prototype system for reforming JP-8 to enable the use of fuel cells in theater. Energy, water, and waste reduction are tied to NDCEE efforts to...modernize Army ammunition plants , reducing costs and ensuring a steady supply of ammunition to the warfighter. At Fort Campbell, KY, newly...operating costs at Holston and Radford Army Ammunition Plants . Weapon systems ESOHE efforts also included optimizing various depot maintenance processes

  10. Identifying Potential Weapon Systems That Can Be Divested

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-04-08

    List of Figures Figure 1.1 – TACOM LCMC Sustainment Systems Technical Support (SSTS) Operation Maintenance Army (OMA)……………………………………………………………………….6...LCMC Sustainment Systems Technical Support (SSTS) Operation Maintenance Army (OMA) Requirements Tracking System (TORTS) process used to develop...Force operational concepts (Peltz, 2003). The Army’s ability to keep systems operational from a maintenance standpoint is driven by two factors

  11. Applying a System-of-Systems Engineering Perspective to Current and Future Army Acquisitions

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-06-01

    of detecting short- and long-range rockets and mortars. They currently provide detection capability for the C-RAM ( Higgins 2007). The weapon system... Higgins 2007). This is where the Army Air Defense came into play. The decision makers demonstrated understanding that the FAAD C2 and AMDWS...from the mortars 28 will endanger civilians. As stated in Higgins ’ study, “At the tactical level, the clearing of fires before the gun could

  12. Press On! Selected Works of General Donn A. Starry. Volume 2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-01-01

    of age is qualified and eligible for active military duty. The Army must enlist 1 out of every 16 of these young men. This year, the Army will...forces by upgrading our aging weapons stockpile with enhanced radiation weapons; trading off some shorter-range, lower-yield weapons for mid- range...on fitness for duty performance, and on good health and appearance, not on sex, age , the installation to which one happens to be assigned, or other

  13. Blast Computations over a Hemicylindrical Aircraft Shelter

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-07-01

    Westmoreland, C.D., "The HULL Hydro- dinamics Computer Code", AFWL-TR-76-183, U.S. Air Force Wocpon Laboratory, Kirtland Air Force Baze, IN (Septenber...DISTRIBUTION LIST No. of No. of Copies Organization Copies Organization 2 Commander 1 Director Defense Technical Info Center Weapons Systems Evaluation Gp ATTN...DRDTA-’’. Fort Monroe, VA 23651 Warrel, MI 48090 2 Director Commander US Army TRADOC Systems US Army Foreign Scienco and Analysis Activity Technology

  14. The Evolution of Fire Support Doctrine Was Driven by Airmobile Doctrine and New Weapon Systems During the Vietnam War

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2004-06-18

    army.mil/history/factsheets/army.shtml (accessed on 26 Apr 2004). 7Catchpole, 153. 8Pamela Feltus , Air Power: The Korean War, U.S., [Centennial of...Edgar C., Jr. Tools of War. Boston, MA: Boston Publishing Company, 1984. 87 Feltus , Pamela. Air Power: The Korean War, U.S. Centennial of Flight

  15. Applying a System-of-Systems Engineering Perspective to Current and Future Army Acquisitions

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-06-01

    detecting short- and long-range rockets and mortars. They currently provide detection capability for the C-RAM ( Higgins 2007). The weapon system for... Higgins 2007). This is where the Army Air Defense came into play. The decision makers demonstrated understanding that the FAAD C2 and AMDWS provided...the mortars 28 will endanger civilians. As stated in Higgins ’ study, “At the tactical level, the clearing of fires before the gun could engage a

  16. Army requirements for micro and nanotechnology-based sensors in weapons health and battlefield environmental monitoring applications

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ruffin, Paul; Brantley, Christina; Edwards, Eugene; Hutcheson, Guilford

    2006-03-01

    The Army Aviation and Missile Research, Development, and Engineering Center (AMRDEC) and the Army Research Laboratory (ARL) have initiated a joint advanced technology demonstration program entitled "Prognostics/Diagnostics for the Future Force (PDFF)" with a key objective of developing low or no power embedded sensor suites for harsh environmental monitoring. The most critical challenge of the program is to specify requirements for the embedded sensor suites which will perform on-board diagnostics, maintain a history of sensor data, and forecast weapon health. The authors are currently collaborating with the PDFF program managers and potential customers to quantify the requirements for remotely operated, micro/nano-technology-based sensors for a host of candidate weapon systems. After requirements are finalized, current micro/nanotechnology-based temperature, humidity, g-shock, vibration and chemical sensors for monitoring the out-gassing of weapons propellant, as well as hazardous gaseous species on the battlefield and in urban environments will be improved to meet the full requirements of the PDFF program. In this paper, performance requirements such as power consumption, reliability, maintainability, survivability, size, and cost, along with the associated technical challenges for micro/nanotechnology-based sensor systems operating in military environments, are discussed. In addition, laboratory results from the design and testing of a wireless sensor array, which was developed using a thin film of functionalized carbon nanotube materials, are presented. Conclusions from the research indicate that the detection of bio-hazardous materials is possible using passive and active wireless sensors based on monitoring the reflected phase from the sensor.

  17. [Use of chemical war gases at the Russian-German front during the First World War].

    PubMed

    Budko, A A; Ivanovskii, Yu V

    2016-02-01

    The First World War was notable for the widespread use of machine military hardware and absolutely new type of weapon--chemical weapon. As a result of the first gas attack by chlorine undertaken by the German army against the Russian armies on May, 31st, 1915, heavy poisonings have received 9100 people, 6000 of them died. Chemical attack of Germany against Russia was limited by the use chemical gases of suffocating action: chlorine, bromine,phosgene and diphosgene. It is not known exactly, how many times Germany attacked Russian positions with use of chemical gases. On available data, in the First World War from application by German of the chemical weapon Russia has suffered more, than any other of the at war countries: from five hundred thousand poisoned have died nearby 66,000 people. In turn, having received in the order the chemical weapon of own manufacture, Russian army itself tried to attack in the German armies. It is authentically known only about several cases of application dy Russian of fighting poison gases, and in all cases of loss of germen were insignificant.

  18. Military laser weapons: current controversies.

    PubMed

    Seet, B; Wong, T Y

    2001-09-01

    Military laser weapons systems are becoming indispensable in most modern armies. These lasers have undergone many stages of development, and have outpaced research on eye protection measures, which continue to have inherent limitations. Eye injuries caused by military lasers are increasingly reported, leading to speculation that these would become an important cause of blinding in modern conflicts. As part of the effort to ban inhumane weapons, international laws have been passed to restrict the proliferation of such blinding weapons. However, there are controversies concerning the interpretation, implementation and effectiveness of these laws. The ophthalmic community can play a greater role in highlighting ocular morbidity from military lasers, and in preventing their further proliferation.

  19. Report on the Assessment of Arms, Ammunition, and Explosives Accountability and Control; Security Assistance; and Logistics Sustainment for the Iraq Security Forces

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-12-19

    Undistributed ISFF-Funded Equipment 105 17. Iraqi Army Maintenance Program 107 18. Class IX Material Management 115 Part V – Medical Sustainability 123...database and are subsequently forwarded to the Army Material Command, Logistics Support Activity for inclusion in the DoD Small Arms and Light Weapons...be forwarded to the Army Material Command, Logistics Support Activity for inclusion in the DoD Small Arms and Light Weapons Serialization Program

  20. Investigating the Incorporation of Personality Constructs into IMPRINT

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-02-01

    early in the system acquisition process. The U.S. Navy took the lead by developing the HARDMAN Comparability Methodology (HCM) to analyze the trade...space between hardware and manpower. Subsequently, the U.S. Army then adapted HCM, renamed HARDMAN I to include a broader range of weapon systems. A...subsequent evolution by the U.S. Army automated the process and was called HARDMAN II. In the mid to late 1980s HARDMAN II evolved, linking MPT to

  1. Defense Analysis in the United States.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1979-04-06

    and Army process for planning, program - ming, conduct, and reporting of studies, and provides a list of references pertaining to studies and analyses...of analytical activities In a military service, an overviev of the U.S. Army analysis agencies is given. The paper also describes the U.S. DOD and...tactics, doctrine, policies, force plans, strategies, procedures, intelligence, weapons selection and mix, systems, program , or resources, and leading to

  2. An Exclusive Interview.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1998-02-01

    1035/36/38. Articles should be submitted to: DEPARTMENT Video In The Ambulance: Future Battlefield Technology Today OF THE ARMY, ARMY RDA, 9900 BELVOiR...teaching methods. Instructors are video work weapon systems and MS policy and direc- tele-teaching (VTT) courses, so that class- tives must be...A 33 Video In The Ambulance... FUTURE BATTLEFIELD TECHNOLOGY TODAY By LTC Thomas Knuth, MC, Barry Kruse, and James Zadinsky Introduction Eisenhower

  3. U.S. Army Medical Department Journal, October-December 2007

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-12-01

    Warrior Task Training requirements (such as weapons assembly/disassembly and functions check; individual chemical, biological , radiological, nuclear...training program focused on hands-on training in the 40 Army Warrior Tasks and 11 Battle Drills, to include advanced land navigation training; weapons ...familiarization and qualification; convoy operations; chemical, biological , radiological, nuclear and high- explosive defense; and squad and platoon

  4. Advancements in hardware-in-the-loop simulations at the U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Command

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Buford, James A.; Jolly, Alexander C.; Mobley, Scott B.; Sholes, William J.

    2000-07-01

    A greater awareness of and increased interest in the use of modeling and simulation (M&S) has been demonstrated at many levels within the Department of Defense (DoD) and all the Armed Services agencies in recent years. M&S application is regarded as a viable means of lowering the life cycle costs of missile defense and tactical missile weapon system acquisition beginning with studies of new concepts of war-fighting through user training and post-deployment support. The Aviation and Missile Research, Engineering, and Development Center (AMRDEC) of the U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Command (AMCOM) has an extensive history of applying all types of M&S to weapons system development and has been a particularly strong advocate of hardware-in-the-loop (HWIL) simulation and test for many years. Over the past 40 years AMRDEC has developed and maintained the Advanced Simulation Center (ASC) which provides world-class, high fidelity, specific and dedicated HWIL simulation and test capabilities for the Army's missile defense and tactical missile program offices in both the infrared and radio frequency sensor domains. The ASC facility uses M&S to conduct daily HWIL missile simulations and tests to support flight tests, missile/system development, independent verification and validation of weapon system embedded software and simulations, and missile/system performance against current and future threat environments. This paper describes the ASC role, recaps the past year, describes the HWIL components and advancements, and outlines the path-ahead for the ASC in terms of both missile and complete system HWIL simulations and test with a focus on the imaging infrared systems.

  5. The United States Army Medical Department Journal. October-December 2007

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-12-01

    weapons assembly/disassembly and functions check; individual chemical, biological , radiological, nuclear and high-explosive defense; and the operation of...the 40 Army Warrior Tasks and 11 Battle Drills, to include advanced land navigation training; weapons familiarization and qualification; convoy...operations; chemical, biological , radiological, nuclear and high- explosive defense; and squad and platoon-patrol exercises in both woodland and urban

  6. Some Recent Sensor-Related Army Critical Technology Events

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-02-01

    Excalibur (XM982), US Army 2010 Weapon Systems, prepared by OASA (ALT), 92. 15 HAudraH Colloway, “Picatinney’s GPS-guided Excalibur artillery round deemed...liquid phase epitaxy (LPE) and molecular-organo-chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD). There was also an effort in platinum silicide (PtSi) infrared...protective interphasial chemistry not only on transition metal oxide cathodes at high voltage, but also on graphitic graphite at low voltage making

  7. Financial Management: Financial Reporting of Deferred Maintenance Information on Army Weapons Systems for FY 2002

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2003-02-03

    Financial Management February 3, 2003 Office of the Inspector General of the Department of Defense Financial Reporting of Deferred Maintenance...Type N/A Dates Covered (from... to) - Title and Subtitle Financial Management: Financial Reporting of Deferred Maintenance Information on Army...the Department of Defense Report No. D-2003-054 February 3, 2003 (Project No. D2001FJ-0156.002) Financial Reporting of Deferred Maintenance

  8. Changing the Army’s Weapon Training Strategies to Meet Operational Requirements More Efficiently and Effectively

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-01-01

    System Maneuver COe M4/16 Rifle M9 pistol M2 , MK19, and M240B Machine Guns , M249 Squad Automatic Rifle Bradley Fighting Vehicle Abrams Tank Fires COe 155mm...27 Rifle, Machine Gun , and SAW Training...are called desig- nated weapons. For example, a maintenance company may have some machine guns authorized for self-protection that are manned by

  9. Automatic Ammunition Identification Technology Project. Ammunition Logistics Program

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Weil, B.

    1993-03-01

    The Automatic Ammunition Identification Technology (AAIT) Project is an activity of the Robotics & Process Systems Division at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) for the US Army`s Project Manager-Ammunition Logistics (PM-AMMOLOG) at the Picatinny Arsenal in Picatinny, New Jersey. The project objective is to evaluate new two-dimensional bar code symbologies for potential use in ammunition logistics systems and automated reloading equipment. These new symbologies are a significant improvement over typical linear bar codes since machine-readable alphanumeric messages up to 2000 characters long are achievable. These compressed data symbologies are expected to significantly improve logistics and inventory management tasks andmore » permit automated feeding and handling of ammunition to weapon systems. The results will be increased throughout capability, better inventory control, reduction of human error, lower operation and support costs, and a more timely re-supply of various weapon systems. This paper will describe the capabilities of existing compressed data symbologies and the symbol testing activities being conducted at ORNL for the AAIT Project.« less

  10. Department of Defense Cost Analysis Symposium (26th) on Cost Analysis in an Uncertain Defense Environment Held in Washington, DC on 9-11 September 1992

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-09-09

    ASHER Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Program, Analysis & Evaluation) MR. JAMES C. PILGER Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army...CHANGES TO THE MAJOR WEAPONS SYSTEM ACQUISITION PROCESS The major weapon system acquisition processes forged during the Cold War may not be practical...No one can estimate the extent of cost growth with a high degree of accuracy. However, review of 30-40 years of cold war history dops allow the

  11. 78 FR 57323 - York River and the Naval Weapons Station Yorktown-Cheatham Annex, Yorktown, Virginia; Danger Zone

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-09-18

    ... the Naval Weapons Station Yorktown-Cheatham Annex, Yorktown, Virginia; Danger Zone AGENCY: U.S. Army... follows: Sec. 334.285 York River and the Naval Weapons Station Yorktown- Cheatham Annex, Yorktown...) Enforcement. The regulations in this section shall be enforced by the Commander, Naval Weapons Station...

  12. 32 CFR 552.98 - Purpose.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... REGULATIONS AFFECTING MILITARY RESERVATIONS Firearms and Weapons § 552.98 Purpose. This regulation establishes... dangerous weapons and instruments on Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield (AAF) installations. ...

  13. 32 CFR 552.98 - Purpose.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... REGULATIONS AFFECTING MILITARY RESERVATIONS Firearms and Weapons § 552.98 Purpose. This regulation establishes... dangerous weapons and instruments on Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield (AAF) installations. ...

  14. The Bauschinger and Hardening Effects on Residual Stresses in an Autofrettaged Thick-Walled Cylinder

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-06-01

    8217Large Caliber Weapon3 Systems Labrra-ory 1ý’ NUBE OF PAGES Dover, 1.7)70 14 "NITOING AGENCY N XME: A ADDRF!SS(Ir -ditI.. fromI Controlling Office. IS...US ARMY AMCCOM COMMANDER ATTN: DRSMC-LC(D) 1 US ARMY TANK-AUTMV COMD DRSMC-LCE(D) I ATTN: DRSTA-RC DRSMC-LCM(D) ( BLDC 321) 1 WARREN, MI 48090 DRSMC-LCS

  15. Annotated Bibliography of the Army Research Institute’s Training Research Supporting the Land Warrior and Ground Soldier Systems: 1998-2009

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-07-01

    AN/ PAQ -4C and AN-PEQ-2A) which were used in conjunction with night vision goggles (NVGs, AN/PVS-7B), the thermal weapon sight (TWS, AN/PAS-13), and...lights (AN/ PAQ -4C and AN-PEQ-2A) which were used in conjunction with night vision goggles (NVGs, AN/PVS-7B), and the thermal weapon sight (TWS, AN/PAS

  16. [Sanitary and chemical protection during the Great Patriotic War].

    PubMed

    Imangulov, R G; Grebeniuk, A N; Rybalko, V M; Nosov, A V

    2011-05-01

    During the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945) there was a real danger of use by German armies of the chemical weapon against staff of Red Army. However German command didn't risked to go on conducting large-scale chemical war against the USSR that rescued from painful death millions person. A principal cause of this decision was well organized and technically provided system of antigas protection in Red Army, including precisely organized actions of sanitary-chemical protection, qualitative preparation of military doctors on these questions and presence at them effective antidotes and other means of treatment of injuries by fighting poison gases.

  17. U.S. Army Unmanned Aircraft Systems Roadmap 2010-2035: Eyes of the Army

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-04-09

    Doppler LIDAR could provide data such as cloud density, wind speed, and real-time vertical wind pro- files). Also, a multispectral LIDAR payload designed...usually operate from unimproved areas and do not usually require an improved runway. Payloads may include a sensor ball with EO/IR and a laser range... lasers , communications relay, SIGINT, AIS, weapons, and supplies. Group 5 UAS must meet DoD airworthiness standards prior to operation in NAS

  18. Tactical Nuclear Weapons-Does the U.S. Army Still Need Them?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1995-05-17

    Harry Summers, Colonel, US Army (Ret), "Good Riddance to a Nuclear Disaster ," Army Times, October 14, 1991, p. 78. 140 MAJ Vokac, p. 24. 141 Biddle, p...Role in U.S. Military Strategy?" Comparative Strategy, Vol. 13, pp. 197-209. Summers, Harry, Col. US Army (Ret), "Good Riddance to Nuclear Disaster ," Army

  19. Survey of Army Weapons Training and Weapons Training Devices.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1976-04-01

    er li-68 (MANICON), May 1968. AD 671 128. Nichols, Thomas C. and Theodore R. Powers. oonlig)ht and Ni t Vi1- bilitv. Research Memorandum, HumRRO...Rpsources Laboratories, Brooks AFB, Texas, 1972. GENERAL Training th.vics (Cont’d) Fitzpatrick, Robert. Toiward a Theory of Simulation. System Develop- ment...Evaluation of the Tank, Combat, Full Tracked: 105mm Gun, M60. HumPRO Consulting Report, February 1961 (FIREPOWER VIII). AD 487 893. ’ hHunt , William T

  20. The Next Arms Race

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-07-01

    to curb the proliferation of the means of deliv- ery for weapons of mass destruction. Looking ahead, it will be of critical importance to seek...pects, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2002, p. 91. 27. As to how many nuclear weapons China has, no one knows. A sharp critic of an...in Siberia and the Far East, where Chinese military modernization has moved the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) from a mass industri- al army built to

  1. A Model of Family Factors and Individual and Unit Readiness: Literature Review

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-02-01

    ability of forces, units, weapon systems, or equipment to deliver the outputs for which they were designed (includes the ability to deploy and employ...the Army’s "Extracts of Non -Divisional TOE," FM 101-10-2, 1977.) At last count, there were approximately a zillion company-sized units in the Army...Hawley (1985) lays out the minimum considerations that must be addressed in designing cross-training programs for surge (i.e., combat condition

  2. Closing the Door Behind You: How the United States Army Conducts Logistical Withdrawals after Lengthy Operations

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-05-23

    great and MACV decided not to implement the program in total. 13 Lieutenant General Joseph M Heiser , Jr. served as the commander of the 1 st...13 Jeffery Clarke, Advice and Support: The Final Years 1965-1973 (Washington: Department of the Army, 1988), 427-429. 14 Joseph M. Heiser , Vietnam...focused on a redistribution of weapon systems. According to Heiser , The phasedown of U.S. operations in Southeast Asia permitted an accelerated delivery

  3. Manned Gaming and Simulation Relating to Terrorism and Weapons of Mass Destruction: A Review of the Literature

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2004-04-17

    Israel’s Blood group and the 1995 use of sarin on the Tokyo subway by the Japanese Aum Shinrikyo cult. However, in the former case, the number of...Center Ft. Irwin, CA Civilian information: (760) 380-3369 http://www.irwin.army.mil/default.htm U.S. Army Red Franchise Organization TRADOC...examination of the 1995 Aum Shinrikyo sarin attack in the Tokyo subway system. From there, Ataxia inventories the various federal response assets and

  4. Expeditionary Economics: A Force Multiplier in the Counterinsurgency Fight

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-05-17

    the Army is the Money as a Weapon System (MAA WS) Standard Operating Procedure. This SOP is infrequently updated and has remained essentially ...Research Series: Expeditionary Economics, 2011 June. Schramm, Carl J. "Institutionalizing Ecnomics Analysis in the U.S. Military: The Basis for

  5. For support of USAMRMC Biological Weapons Convention, treaty and statement implementation activities. Final report, 1 March 1996-28 February 1997

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Fox, J.

    Program of work to provide support to the Biological Arms Control Treaty Office (BACTO) of the U.S. Army Medical Research and Material Command (USAMRMC), in the development of Army and U.S. Government negotiation, implementation and compliance policies and preparations regarding potential verification and confidence measures for the 1975 Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) and related biological weapons agreements. Support services provided included the preparation of Army installations and commands for implementation of visits pursuant to the U.S./UK/Russian Trilateral Statement on BW. Support included site assistance visit, development of required facility documentation and briefings, identification of additional facilities potentially subject to access,more » and support to DOD development of guidelines, procedures, documentation, and other materials for the conduct of visits. Specific tasks under this contract included: identification and delineation of `Military Biological Facilities` and related activities at Army installations; development of visit implementation documentation for the Army; assessment of potentially at-risk equities and sensitivities at relevant facilities; facility staff training and preparation; and review and modification of facility inputs to annual BWC Confidence Building Measure Declarations. Also supported the provision of timely and critical technical support to the Joint Staff and OSD in the development of DoD negotiation biological arms control positions.« less

  6. Systems Thinking for Strategic Leaders

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-06-01

    needed to man weapons systems and equipment to fight according to Army doctrine. There are series of interactions that have second and third order...otherwise go. The indirect approach to diplomacy is especially difficult for democracies because the approach may appear to be leading the state in a...military operations must be approached from a systems perspective. In the ancient world, Xenophon, a contemporary of Plato , described just such a

  7. Department of the Army Justification of Estimates for Fiscal Year 1983 Submitted to Congress February 1982. Part 3 (Weapons & Tracked Combat Vehicles).

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-02-01

    of 130 kits for the Fire Support Teem Vehicle, an integrated system platform which will provide under - armor protection for the ground laser locator...procureuent of 495 kits for the Fire Support Team Vehicles, an integrated system platform which will provide under - armor protection for the Ground Laser

  8. Homicide-suicide cases in Switzerland and their impact on the Swiss Weapon Law.

    PubMed

    Grabherr, Silke; Johner, Stephan; Dilitz, Carine; Buck, Ursula; Killias, Martin; Mangin, Patrice; Plattner, Thomas

    2010-12-01

    Homicide followed by the suicide of the offender is a well-known phenomenon. In most cases, it takes place in the context of the so-called "family tragedies." A recent series of such family tragedies in Switzerland prompted an intensive debate in the media and the Swiss government concerning the Swiss Weapon Law, in particular the requirement to keep personal army weapons at home. The present study of Homicide-Suicide cases in Switzerland, thus focuses on the role played by guns, especially military weapons, in such crimes. We investigated retrospectively 75 cases of Homicide-Suicide, comprising 172 individuals and spanning a period of 23 years in western and central Switzerland. Our results show that if guns were used in 76% of the cases, army weapons were the cause of death in 25% of the total. In 28% of the deaths caused by a gunshot, the exact type of the gun and its origin could not be determined. Thus, the majority of Homicide-Suicide cases in Switzerland involve the use of guns. The exact percentage of cases were military weapons were involved could not be defined. In our opinion, a stricter weapons law, restricting access to firearms, would be a factor of prevention of Homicide- Suicide cases in Switzerland.

  9. An end-to-end communications architecture for condition-based maintenance applications

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kroculick, Joseph

    2014-06-01

    This paper explores challenges in implementing an end-to-end communications architecture for Condition-Based Maintenance Plus (CBM+) data transmission which aligns with the Army's Network Modernization Strategy. The Army's Network Modernization strategy is based on rolling out network capabilities which connect the smallest unit and Soldier level to enterprise systems. CBM+ is a continuous improvement initiative over the life cycle of a weapon system or equipment to improve the reliability and maintenance effectiveness of Department of Defense (DoD) systems. CBM+ depends on the collection, processing and transport of large volumes of data. An important capability that enables CBM+ is an end-to-end network architecture that enables data to be uploaded from the platform at the tactical level to enterprise data analysis tools. To connect end-to-end maintenance processes in the Army's supply chain, a CBM+ network capability can be developed from available network capabilities.

  10. Guide for Transitioning Army Missile Systems From Development to Production.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-07-01

    cost reduction ideas. 3 e! M. atumtion0 !eM . One missile system currently In fall *"I* develoluft, MM9 bee foregone the traditional engineering... costs , delivery schedules and deployment dates. Because of these difficulties and a desire to improve the weapon systems acquisition process, the...tered during the transition of new missile systems into production include: 1. High production unit costs - Occasionally the number of systems to be

  11. The Myth of the Silver Bullet: Does Technical Superiority Equate to Battlefield Success?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-03-30

    Victorian period alone, the British army suffered significant defeats in India and Zululand and strategic defeat in Afghanistan, Sudan, and the Transvaal.28...capability of their systems and fought the battle in a fashion that maximized their weapons potential. It was, “Through the evolution of technological

  12. 2nd Annual Postdoc Research Day: US Army Research Laboratory PosterSymposia and Activities

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2018-04-12

    ARL-SR-0394•APR 2018 US Army Research Laboratory 2nd Annual Postdoc Research Day: US Army Research Laboratory Poster Symposia and Activities by...Do not return it to the originator. ARL-SR-0394•APR 2018 US Army Research Laboratory 2nd Annual Postdoc Research Day: US Army Research Laboratory...Poster Symposia and Activities by Efraín Hernández–Rivera Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, ARL Julia Cline Oak Ridge Institute for Science and

  13. Weapons Systems, United States Army 1997.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1997-01-01

    fewer grenades, a new warhead section fuze and a modified center core burster. The XM85 grenade is equipped with a new self -destruct fuze designed to...Liquid Propellant Gun and an automated loading system. Crusader also requires 3 fewer crewmen than previous self -propelled artillery systems. The new ...market, creating new market opportunities for commercial rotocraft and ensuring the continued supremacy of this technol- ogy that is so critical to

  14. Operational Alternatives for Air Assault Forces in the 1990s.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-06-01

    combined arms fashion. The study stipulates that the helicopter, as an entity, is an accepted system in the arsenal and operational doctrines of...modern armies. Generally accepted roles include tactical and administrative transport, and weapons system platform. At issue is the Optimtm con... system also requires a concomitant adjustment in tactics and extant force structures to acccmodate the missions and doctrines that emerge. 11. U.S

  15. DefenseLink.mil - Special Report - Soldiers Train with Non-lethal Weapons

    Science.gov Websites

    Training 10th Mountain Division soldiers feel the effects of a Taser during non-lethal weapons training Nov soldiers feel the effects of a Taser during non-lethal weapons training Nov. 19, 2008, at Fort Drum, N.Y situation can be resolved without lethal measures, Army Staff Sgt. Eric Johnson said during training and

  16. Army Training Study: Training Effectiveness Analysis (TEA) Summary. Volume 3. REDEYE Weapons System.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-08-08

    gunners provide Air Defense. At night, when the unit moves, the gunners must go also. This tires the gunner extremely fast , which makes him less astute in...Army AIT is the Lanier " Slow Comet," which has a 75" wing span and is 43" long. The craft provides a profile which is representative of a small prop...that what you are doing in the Ariv is worthwhile or not? a. I am certain it is vworthwhile. b. I think it is worthwhile. c. I don’t t) hink it is

  17. Singapore-US Strategic Dialogue on Biosecurity

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-07-01

    and response. Threats falling under this category include acts of bioterrorism and biological weapons attacks, the nefarious manipulation of dual...counterterrorism experts believe the risk is “very low.” Still, as a US participant remarked, the " biological weapons may be a low- probability threat in...point, one US participant reminded the group that a key member of the Al Qaeda biological weapons program was a former member of the Malaysian army

  18. Army Equipment Modernization Plan

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-01-01

    750 weapons. This weapon is approximately 60 percent lighter than the current weapon – the M2 Heavy Machine Gun . • $21.3M (WTCV) procures 12,000...key soldier Portfolio accomplishments (fY11/12): • Reduced Soldier load in Afghanistan by replac- ing 501 M240B Medium Machine Guns with Lightweight...lightening the Soldier load. » 5,000 additional .50 cal Machine guns supporting increased requirements for Theater and Sustainment, Protection and

  19. Minutes of the Explosives Safety Seminar (25th) Held in Anaheim, California on 18-20 August 1992. Volume 2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-08-20

    NAVAL STTRFACE WARFARE CENTER MR. KRATOVIL EDWARD NAVAL SEA SYSTEMS COMMAND MR KRAUSE WILLIAM UNITED TECHNOLOGIES-ASD MR. KRAUTHAMMER THEODOR PENN...ARMY DEPOT MR. WOLFGANG GARY OLIN ORDNANCE MR. WOOD RANDALL EG&G MOUND APPLIED TECHNOLOGIES MR. WOOD SCOTT NAVAL WEAPONS STATION - SEAL BEACH MR

  20. Technology Survey of Advanced Army Weapon Systems and Their Support Requirements.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-03-01

    the YAH-64A is eight HELLFIRE missiles and 320 rounds of 30mm ADEN /DEFA ammunition, With this payload, it will have the following performance under...improved suspension that permits 14-in. vertical tra- vel of the road wheels. The XM-3 CFV is identical to the XM-2 IFV (see Figure 6) in external

  1. Is There Space for the Objective Force?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2003-04-07

    force through the combination of precision weapons and knowledge-based warfare. Army forces will survive through information dominance , provided by a...Objective Forces. Space-based systems will be foundational building blocks for the Objective Force to achieve information dominance and satellite...communications required for information dominance across a distributed battlefield? Second, what exists to provide the Objective Force information

  2. Integrated Air and Missile Defense (IAMD)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-12-01

    equal to or greater than the effectiveness levels of fielded TBM and CM/ABT defense systems. Common Command and Control The Army IAMD SoS common C2...externally developed sensors and shooters to provide an effective IAMD capability. The IAMD program will allow transformation to a network-centric system of...systems capability, also referred to as "Plug and Fight", that integrates all Air and Missile Defense (AMD) sensors, weapons, and mission control

  3. XM1 Gunnery Training and Aptitude Requirements Analyses

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-02-01

    of the XML tank weapons system. Army materiel systems such as the XK tank are initiated, developed, de - ployed, supported, modified and disposed in...Analysis ( TASA ) to satisfy the FEA requirement. Users of the TASA at the Armor School were uniformly critical of the work. Generally described as...inaccurate, incomplete and to a large extent, obsolete the TASA failed to provide the information necessary for addressing the concerns of future operators

  4. UGV History 101: A Brief History of Unmanned Ground Vehicle (UGV) Development Efforts

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1995-01-01

    robots). These successful demonstrations led to the formulation of the Teleoperated Mobile Anti-Armor Platform ( TMAP ) program, and prototype systems were...Unfortunately, Congressional direction in December 1987 prohibited the emplacement of weapons systems on robots, and the TMAP was retargeted to the...Technology Demonstration project, a demonstration incorporating both the Army’s TMAPs and the GATERS TOV was held at Camp Pendleton in September 1989

  5. Energetic Azido Compounds

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-03-28

    Dr. F. Roberto Lt. S. Clift Naval Weapons Center 3 Mr. ;. Geisler Chi•a Lakre, CA 93555 4a Attn: Dr. A. Amsrer, Code 385 U.S. Army Research Office I...Research Naval: Weapons Center 1 Directorate of Chemical Sciences China Lake, CA 93555 Bolling Air Force Base Attn: Mr. H. Richter, Code 3858

  6. The effects of man-made smokes and battlefield-induced smokes on the propagation of electromagnetic radiation

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Vandewal, Anthony

    1993-11-01

    This paper provides an unclassified overview of the U.S. Army program that collects and disseminates information about the effects of battlefied smokes and obscurants on weapon system performance. The primary mechanism for collecting field data is an annual exercise called SMOKE WEEK. In SMOKE WEEK testing, a complete characterization is made of the ambient test conditions, of the electromagnetic radiation propagation in clear and obscured conditions, and of the obscuring cloud that the particles that comprise the cloud. This paper describes the instrumentation and methodology employed to make these field measurements, methods of analysis, and some typical results. The effects of these realistic battlefield environments on weapons system performance are discussed generically.

  7. Proceedings of the Annual Tri-Service Manufacturing Technology Conference (12th) 19-23 October 1980. Sheraton-Bal Harbour, Bal Harbour, Florida.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-10-23

    1700 N. Moore Street, Suite 1923 Mail Stop 24021000 Western Avenue Arlington, VA 22209 Lynn, MA 01910 KLIMAN, DR. M. KOTLER , R. Army Materials...Mechanics Research Center US Army Missile Command ATTN: DR. MORTON KLIMAN ATTN: MR. RICHARD KOTLER Army Materials & Mechanics Res. Cir. DRSMI-ET...SMITH, P. J. STOYKO, M. A. Naval Weapons Support Center US Army Mun. Prod. Base Mod. Agency ATTN: MR. PHILIP J. SMITH ATTN: MR. MICHAEL A. STOYKO Code

  8. Effects of Physical Impairment on Grenade Throwing and Weapon Loading Tasks

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-03-01

    1 GOVT PRINTG OFC (PDF) A MALHOTRA 1 ARMY RSCH LABORATORY – HRED (PDF) RDRL HRM D T DAVIS BLDG 5400 RM C242 REDSTONE ARSENAL...5002 1 ARMY RSCH LABORATORY – HRED (PDF) RDRL HRM DG J RUBINSTEIN BLDG 333 PICATINNY ARSENAL NJ 07806-5000 1 ARMY RSCH LABORATORY...HRED (PDF) ARMC FIELD ELEMENT RDRL HRM CH C BURNS THIRD AVE BLDG 1467B RM 336 FORT KNOX KY 40121 1 ARMY RSCH LABORATORY – HRED

  9. Synthesis of reference compounds related to Chemical Weapons Convention for verification and drug development purposes – a Brazilian endeavour

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Cavalcante, S. F. A.; de Paula, R. L.; Kitagawa, D. A. S.; Barcellos, M. C.; Simas, A. B. C.; Granjeiro, J. M.

    2018-03-01

    This paper deals with challenges that Brazilian Army Organic Synthesis Laboratory has been going through to access reference compounds related to the Chemical Weapons Convention in order to support verification analysis and for research of novel antidotes. Some synthetic procedures to produce the chemicals, as well as Quality Assurance issues and a brief introduction of international agreements banning chemical weapons are also presented.

  10. Multiservice Procedures for the Tactical Employment of Nonlethal Weapons (NLW)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1998-10-01

    capsicum (OC) spray, impact weapons, and internationally recognized open-hand control techniques. The US Army will award an additional skill identifier...dealing with people are truly the first line of nonlethal options. d. Oleoresin Capsicum Aerosol Train- ing. The subcourse is an introduction to the uses...Oleoresin Capsicum Aerosol Training 8.0 Open Hand Control 24.0 Impact Weapons 36.0 Introduction to Military Working Dogs 1.0 ROE/Law of War

  11. The ROK Army’s Role When North Korea Collapses Without a War with the ROK

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2001-02-01

    produced large amounts of biological and chemical weapons. In addition, North Korea continues to develop nuclear weapons and missile technology and export...process. 6. Security and safe disposal of WMD. This includes research, production and storage facilities for nuclear, biological and chemical weapons...Publishers, 1989. Naisbitt, John . Megatrends Asia: Eight Asian Megatrends That Are Reshaping Our World, New York: Simon and Schuster. 1996. The New

  12. Competitive Advantage, Uncertainty, and Weapons Procurement: Striking Balance for the Future

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-05-02

    position of the Department of the Army, Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government. COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE , UNCERTAINTY, AND WEAPONS PROCUREMENT: STRIKING...Competitive Advantage , Uncertainty, and Weapons Procurement: Striking Balance for the Future 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR(S) 5d...the right balance of investments all leading to a sustained competitive advantage . This paper presents an analysis of how effective this overhaul has

  13. Proceedings of the Annual National Conference on ADA Technology (9th) Held in Washington, DC on 4-7 March 1991

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-03-07

    rsolve the attack; delay whil the weapon has to wait; RESOURCE ALLOCATION . PRIORITY OF signal readiness to CONTROL; TARGETS. AND BIAS OF THE SYSTEM...Communications Systems. focal point for Computer Resource He served as project manager for the Management (CRM), Advanced Software development of the Joint...Interface Test Technology (AST), Ada Technology, Systems (JITS) - the world’s largest Joint/Army Interoperability Testing distributed command and

  14. Index to Benet Weapons Laboratory (LCWSL) Technical Reports - 1984.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-07-01

    construed as an official Department of the Army position unless so designated by other authorized documents. The use of trade name(s) and/or manufacture...Apr 84 System Autoloader D.E. Jones (BWL POC) ARLCB-CR-84011 Conceptual Autoloader Design B.D. Goodell Apr 84 Study for Future Armament System M.W... Design for 120mm J.E. Wildman Apr 84 Improved Conventional Armament D.E. Jones System (ICAS) Autoloader (BWL POC) ARLCB-MR-84013 Cadmium Plating vs

  15. 77 FR 20331 - Department of the Army, Corps of Engineers

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-04-04

    ... and Indian Field Creek along the York River in Yorktown, VA; Restricted Area AGENCY: U.S. Army Corps... comments. SUMMARY: The Corps of Engineers is proposing to amend an existing permanent restricted area in... Weapons Station Yorktown is requesting the Corps of Engineers modify the existing restricted area to...

  16. Generalized Optimal-State-Constraint Extended Kalman Filter (OSC-EKF)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-02-01

    ARL-TR-7948• FEB 2017 US Army Research Laboratory GeneralizedOptimal-State-Constraint ExtendedKalman Filter (OSC-EKF) by James M Maley, Kevin...originator. ARL-TR-7948• FEB 2017 US Army Research Laboratory GeneralizedOptimal-State-Constraint ExtendedKalman Filter (OSC-EKF) by James M Maley Weapons and...

  17. U.S. Army Training in the Tactical Employment of Chemical Weapons: A flaw in Our Chemical Deterrence?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-12-09

    y horse drawn milltary 𔃾 transportation system A.3 Germany began to suffer reverses In Fance .wld on tlt . front, Hitler, who initially had been...September 1987. Rogers, Gen Bernard. Interview. "Chemical Deterrence is Imperative". _ National Guard, March 1985, p. 27-8. Segal, David. ’Soviet Union’s

  18. Smallpox: Is the Department of Defense Prepared?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2003-01-01

    ESSENCE Electronic Surveillance System for Early Notification of Community-Based Epidemics EV Eczema vaccinatum FDA Food and Drug Administration GV...polymorphism TK Thymidine kinase viii USAMRIID U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases VIG Vaccinia immunoglobulin WMD Weapons of mass...known as vaccinia immunoglobulin (VIG) and the introduction of serologic testing for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The Department of Defense (DoD

  19. Evaluation of weapons' combustion products in armored vehicles. Final report, 30 September 1986-14 December 1988

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Menzies, K.T.; Randel, M.A.; Quill, A.L.

    1989-01-01

    The U.S. Army Biomedical Research and Development Laboratory defined an extensive research program to address the generation of potentially toxic propellant combustion products in crew compartments of armored vehicles during weapons firing. The major objectives of the research were: (1) to determine the presence and concentration of propellant combustion products, (2) to determine potential crew exposure to these combustion products, and (3) to assess the efficacy of field monitoring in armored vehicles. To achieve these goals, air monitoring was conducted in selected armored vehicle types, i.e., M109, M60, M3, M1, at several Army installations. Auxiliary information concerning the specific munitionsmore » fired and the Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) or Forces Command (FORSCOM) firing scenarios was collected so that a comparison of pollutant concentrations generated by specific weapons both within vehicle types and between vehicle types could be made.« less

  20. PRESENTED 03/01/2006: 2006 REMOTE SENSING AND GIS IN THE REMEDIATION OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS CONTAMINATION IN AN URBAN LANDSCAPE

    EPA Science Inventory

    During World War 1, The American University in Washington, DC was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitions including chemical weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite

  1. Ignoring History: The Flawed Effort to Divorce Reconnaissance From Security in Modern Cavalry Transformation

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2006-06-16

    Weapons of the Waffen -SS: From Small Arms to Tanks (Wellingsborough: Patrick Stephens, Limited, 1988), 106. 47 McCarthy, 29. 48 Schnieder,193-197. 49...book of the German army in the twentieth century). Freiburg, Germany: Podzun- Pallas, 1990. Quarrie, Bruce, Weapons of the Waffen -SS: From Small Arms

  2. Descriptive Summaries of the Research Development Test & Evaluation Army Appropriation FY 1983. Supporting Data FY 1983, Budget Estimate Submitted to Congress February 1982. Volume III.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-02-01

    11-17 TACTICAL PROGRAMS 2.37.24.A HEAVY ANTITAIg/ASSAULT WEAPON SYSTEM (TOW...AIRBORNE,4) DIO SYSTEM (SINCGARS)................................ 11-328 6.37.47.A SOLDIER SUPPORT/SURVIVABILITY...enhanced illumination over the current 81mm mortar. The current smoke cartridges for the 81mm mortar and 4.2" battalion heavy mortar, in use since the

  3. Recursive Gradient Estimation Using Splines for Navigation of Autonomous Vehicles.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-07-01

    AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES C. N. SHEN DTIC " JULY 1985 SEP 1 219 85 V US ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER LARGE CALIBER WEAPON SYSTEMS LABORATORY I...GRADIENT ESTIMATION USING SPLINES FOR NAVIGATION OF AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES Final S. PERFORMING ORG. REPORT NUMBER 7. AUTHOR(q) 8. CONTRACT OR GRANT NUMBER...which require autonomous vehicles . Essential to these robotic vehicles is an adequate and efficient computer vision system. A potentially more

  4. Pilot of the Modern Army Recordkeeping System (MARKS) at Headquarters, U.S. Army Armor Center and Fort Knox, Fort Knox, Kentucky, January-December 1984.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-05-01

    Clothing and Textile Materiel 341 Standardization 36 Audit 37 Financial Administration 410 Medical Services 50 Nuclear and Chemical Weapons and Materiel 55...Transaction Files 314-18 210-60b NAF Report of Audit Files 314-27 36-5a NAF Payroll Control Files 36-75a 316-01 36-2a GAO Audit Reporting Files 36-5b 316-02...ll-7a Internal Review Files 316-03 36-5c AAA Audit Reporting Files 316-15 36-5d DAS Audit Reporting Files 319-12 37-107a Commercial Account Claim

  5. Building A Better Force: Regular Army / Reserve Components Integration In The Army Chemical Corps

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-05-26

    the Reserve Components (RCs) assumed sole responsibility for providing the Army with smoke, heavy decontamination, and biological detection ...production of anthrax.20 In 2010, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula urged "brothers with degrees in microbiology or chemistry …to develop a weapon of mass...Army’s generated smoke, heavy decontamination, and biological detection units. This places a greater reliance on the RCs for unique, low density

  6. Acoustic Directivity Patterns for Army Weapons

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1979-01-01

    work was performed by the Environmental Division (EN), u.S. Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratory (CERL). Dr. R. K. Jain is Chief of EN...V) P.0. Schomer,,, L. M./Little I rTPRFORMING ORGANI ZATION NAME AND ADDRESS 0.PROG3RAM ELEMENT. PPOJECT, TAWF U.S. ARMY AREA & WORK UNIT NUMBERS...34Environmental Quality for Construction and Operation of Military Facilities" Task 03, "Pollution Control Technology" and Work Unit 001, "Prediction of

  7. RAM simulation model for SPH/RSV systems

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Schryver, J.C.; Primm, A.H.; Nelson, S.C.

    1995-12-31

    The US Army`s Project Manager, Crusader is sponsoring the development of technologies that apply to the Self-Propelled Howitzer (SPH), formerly the Advanced Field Artillery System (AFAS), and Resupply Vehicle (RSV), formerly the Future Armored Resupply Vehicle (FARV), weapon system. Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) is currently performing developmental work in support of the SPH/PSV Crusader system. Supportive analyses of reliability, availability, and maintainability (RAM) aspects were also performed for the SPH/RSV effort. During FY 1994 and FY 1995 OPNL conducted a feasibility study to demonstrate the application of simulation modeling for RAM analysis of the Crusader system. Following completion ofmore » the feasibility study, a full-scale RAM simulation model of the Crusader system was developed for both the SPH and PSV. This report provides documentation for the simulation model as well as instructions in the proper execution and utilization of the model for the conduct of RAM analyses.« less

  8. Putting the military back into the history of the military-industrial complex: the management of technological innovation in the U.S. Army, 1945-1960.

    PubMed

    Lassman, Thomas C

    2015-03-01

    In 1946 General Dwight Eisenhower, the Army Chief of Staff, established the Research and Development (R&D) Division on the War Department General Staff to expedite major technological breakthroughs in weapons technology. This goal, based on the separation of the management of R&D from procurement, captured the Army's preference for qualitative rather than quantitative superiority on the battlefield, but it threatened to upend entrenched methods of incremental product improvement under way in the Army's supply organizations, collectively called the technical services. The division's brief existence (it ceased operations in 1947) contrasted sharply with the longevity of the Ordnance Department's in-house manufacturing arsenals; for more than a century they had exploited synergies between R&D and production to turn out new weapons mass-produced in industry. The history of the R&D Division and the corresponding management of technological innovation in the technical services broadens an otherwise narrow historiographical interpretation of postwar knowledge production in the United States that is still focused heavily on the moral and political economy of military-funded academic research.

  9. Investigation and Remediation Records Concerning Incidents of Weapons Discharges by Private Security Contractors Can Be Improved

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-07-28

    Incidents of Weapons Discharges by Private Security Contractors Can Be Improved 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6...for Iraq Reconstruction,400 Army Navy Drive,Arlington,VA,22202-4704 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER 9. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S...Defense’s (DoD) oversight of incidents involving the firing—or discharge —of weapons reported from May 2008 through February 2009 by its PSCs

  10. Impulse noise trauma during army weapon firing.

    PubMed

    Munjal, K R; Singh, V P

    1997-04-01

    A 100 infanty personnel firing modern weapons such as the Anti Tank Guided Missile, 106mm Recoiless Gun (RCL), 84mm Rocket Launcher (RL) and 81mm Mortar were studied for the effect of impulse noise on the ear and the evolution of the Temporary Threshold Shift (TTS), Recovery Time (RT) and Permanent Threshold Shift (PTS) was traced.

  11. REMOTE SENSING AND GIS IN THE REMEDIATION OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS CONTAMINATION IN AN URBAN LANDSCAPE

    EPA Science Inventory

    During World War I, The American University in Washington D.C. was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitions including chemical weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite. After the end of t...

  12. ADVANCEMENTS IN NEUTRON RADIOGRAPHY WITHIN THE DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-11-01

    Defense (DoD) production facility for direct use in quality control of munitions and weapons system by means of neutron radiographic inspection...UNCLASSIFIED UNCLASSIFIED AD-E403 813 Technical Report AREIS-TR-16004 ADVANCEMENTS IN NEUTRON RADIOGRAPHY WITHIN THE...REPORT DATE (DD-MM-YYYY) November 2016 2. REPORT TYPE Final 3. DATES COVERED (From – To) 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE ADVANCEMENTS IN NEUTRON

  13. Engineering Design Handbook. Army Weapon Systems Analysis. Part 2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1979-10-01

    EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN ............................... ............ 41-3 41-5 RESULTS OF THE ASARS lIX SIMULATIONS ........................... 41-4 41-6 LATIN...sciences and human factors engineering fields utilizing experimental methodology and multi-variable statistical techniques drawn from experimental ...randomly to grenades for the test design . The nine experimental types of hand grenades (first’ nine in Table 33-2) had a "pip" on their spherical

  14. Manpower Planning for New Weapon Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-12-01

    Logistics) take the following actions : 1. Institute formal, post-DSARC management reviews of integrated logistic support implementation to verify...that actions are being taken to minimize manpower and other support resource requirements. 2. Urge the Army, Navy and Marine Corps to press on with...examines how manpower planning actually is done by the military services, and recommends actions by the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Manpower Reserve

  15. Lead Exposures and Biological Responses in Military Weapons Systems. Effects of Long-Term Exposure Among U.S. Army Artillerymen

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-09-01

    64 Dosimetry Data Taken during XRF Measurements at ANL Procedure Thermoluminescent dosimeters ( TLDs ) were placed in various locations during a 1- or...measured in vivo by x-ray fluorescence spectrophotometry. The lead responses evaluated were increases in free erythrocyte porphyrin concentration...8 2.4.1 Instrument Design ..................................... 8 2.4.2 Dosimetry Evaluation .................................. 9

  16. United States Army Weapon Systems 2010

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-09-18

    cue Soldiers based on how their brains process what they see, hear, and feel. Such neuro- ergonomic designs can exploit how the brain functions...environments, as well as techniques to use them for neuro- ergonomic design . Technology development will focus on solutions to cognition, visual...are accomplishing our mission. It is designed to promote greater understanding of our major acquisition programs. It describes what each is designed

  17. Army Contracting Command Workforce Model Analysis

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-02-09

    Empresas in Madrid. His Air Force contracting experience includes F-22 Fighter, C-17 Cargo Transport , and a contingency deployment as director of Joint...and the University of Maryland (University College). He has also conducted visiting seminars at American University in Cairo and Instituto de ...the long total process times that are sometimes involved in weapon system contracting, such an assessment may equate to a de facto future work

  18. Why the United States Must Adopt Lethal Autonomous Weapon Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-05-25

    2017. http://www.designboom.com/ technology /designboom-tech-predictions-robotics-12-26- 2016/. Egan, Matt. "Robots Write Thousands Of News Stories A...views on the morality of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics technology . Eastern culture sees artificial intelligence as an economic savior...Army, 37 pages. The East and West have differing views on the morality of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics technology . Eastern culture

  19. Evaluation of weapons' combustion products in armored vehicles. Appendix A: Sampling and analysis methods. Appendix B: Analytical data. Final report, 30 September 1986-14 December 1988

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Menzies, K.T.; Randel, M.A.; Quill, A.L.

    1989-01-01

    The U.S. Army Biomedical Research and Development Laboratory defined an extensive research program to address the generation of potentially toxic propellant combustion products in crew compartments of armored vehicles during weapons firing. The major objectives of the research were (1) to determine the presence and concentration of propellant combustion products, (2) to determine potential crew exposure to these combustion products, and (3) to assess the efficacy of field monitoring in armored vehicles. To achieve these goals, air monitoring was conducted in selected armored vehicle types, i.e., M109, M60, M3, M1, at several Army installations.

  20. H-Bomb Development: Decision on the Merits or Political Necessity

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-05-23

    Army attempted to solidify its control of atomic energy in the post-war United States through the...capability to prevent the Soviet army from overrunning Western Europe.84 Reliance on atomic weapons combined with the recent...Robert Oppenheimer, Vol. XII, Transcript of hearing before the Personnel Security Board (Washington, DC: US Atomic Energy Commission, April 27, 1954

  1. 75 FR 53266 - United States Army Restricted Area, Designated Portions of Eagle Bay and Eagle River, Fort...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-08-31

    ... subjected to hazardous levels of noise during certain training exercises; Army control of this area is also... within Fort Richardson. The restricted area is necessary to protect the public against hazardous noise... Flats Weapons Training Range Impact Area, Fort Richardson, Alaska; Restricted Area. (a) The area. The...

  2. An Annotated Bibliography of MANPRINT-Related Assessments and Evaluations Conducted by the U.S. Army, 2nd Edition: 1953 to 2009. Volume 1- Index

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-02-01

    System (ACABA) MA 1973 Armored Vest M1955 Body Armor- Armored Vest M1955 USMC M1955 Armored Vest and the Proposed Titanium Nylon Improved... Laser - MILES Multiple Integrated Laser Engagement System in an Operational Environment (MILES) MA 1980 SAW M249 Rifle- 5.56mm- Machine Gun- SAW M249...Weapon System MA 1993 MCF MCF Modular Causeway Ferry (MCF) MA 1993 MDS NBC- Decon- MDS Modular Decontamination System (MDS) MA 1993 MELIOS Laser

  3. Evaluation of weapons' combustion products in armored vehicles. Appendix C: Summary of descriptive statistics (proc tabulate). Appendix D: Summary of comparative statistics. Final report, 30 September 1986-14 December 1988

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Menzies, K.T.; Randel, M.A.; Quill, A.L.

    1989-01-01

    The U.S. Army Biomedical Research and Development Laboratory defined an extensive research program to address the generation of potentially toxic propellant combustion products in crew compartments of armored vehicles during weapons firing. The major objectives of the research were (1) to determine the presence and concentration of propellant combustion products, (2) to determine potential crew exposure to these combustion products, and (3) to assess the efficacy of field monitoring in armored vehicles. To achieve these goals, air monitoring was conducted in selected armored vehicle types, i.e., M109, M60, M3, M1, at several Army installations. Auxiliary information concerning the specific munitionsmore » fired and the Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) or Forces Command (FORSCOM) firing scenarios was collected so that a comparison of pollutant concentrations generated by specific weapons both within vehicle types and between vehicle types could be made.« less

  4. Small ICBM Area Narrowing Report. Volume 1. Hard Mobile Launcher in Random Movement Basing Mode

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-01-01

    WHICH STATE INSTALLATION SERVICE ELIMINATED DE DOVER AIR FORCE BASE AF 4 DE REC AREA, FIRST ARMY ARMY 3 FL AVON PARK AIR FORCE RANGE AF 3 FL CAPE...PLANT NO. 47 AF 3 OH COLUMBUS DEF CONST SUPPLY CTR ARMY 4 OH COLUMBUS WEAPONS IND RES PLANT NAVY 3 OH EVANDALE PLANT NO. 36 AF 3 OH LIMA ARMY TANK...BLANK I I I I i I I I D-19 SENSITIVE FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY 29I 331 J11 31 Alabam .._ _ . _ _ ............. _ . BAY MNETI ALLENTOW DE FUNII X0 LAN AT NO

  5. Task Force Smith and the 24th Infantry Division in Korea, July 1950

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-05-22

    of the Army , 1961), 179-80; Clay Blair, The Forgotten War: America in Korea, 1950- 1953 (New York: Times Books, 1987), 141; Richard E. Ecker, Korean...War: The Unending Conflict in Korea (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 2013), 79; James A. Huston, The Sinews of War: Army Logistics, 1775- 1953 ...strategy of deterrence on its atomic monopoly. In a strategy that relied heavily on air delivered atomic weapons the Army seemed largely irrelevant

  6. Autonomous Robotic Weapons: US Army Innovation for Ground Combat in the Twenty-First Century

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-05-21

    2013, accessed March 29, 2015, http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-21576376?print=true. 113 Steven Kotler, “Say Hello to Comrade Terminator: Russia’s... hello -to-comrade-terminator-russias-army-of- killer-robots/. 114 David Hambling, “Russia Wants Autonomous Fighting Robots, and Lots of Them: Putin’s...how-humans-respond-to- robots-knight/HumanRobot-PartnershipsR2.pdf?la=en. Kotler, Steven. “Say Hello to Comrade Terminator: Russia’s Army of

  7. U.S. Army Rifle and Carbine Adoption between 1865 and 1900

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-06-15

    end-strength of 11,043. General in Chief of the Army General Ulysses S. Grant wanted to increase the Regular Army to 80,000 men , but neither...the weapon to stand. The shooter placed a primer on the nipple and cocked the hammer making the arm ready to fire. When the shooter pulled the...another change to the barrel bands, setting the nipple bolster out a bit further, incorporating a clean out screw instead of an angled flash hole, and

  8. The Promise of Precision

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-03-01

    Ali Ibrahim Al Dulaymi , Commander, I Republican Guard Corps in Kevin M . Woods et al ., The Iraqi Perspectives Report: Saddam’s Senior Leadership on...The Americans were able to induce fear throughout the army by using precision air power.”11 Additionally, the commander of the Al -Nida Armored...use of any other weapon system, including ground-based anti-tank missiles, so conventional artillery fire destroyed an entrenched tank.18 At Al

  9. Structures to Resist the Effects of Accidental Explosions

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-11-01

    Mott, R.I., A Theory of Fragmentation, Army Operational Research Group Memorandun, 113-AC-6427, Great Britain, 1943. 77. Non -Nuclear Weapons Effects...58.1. General Elements which protect non -sensitive explosives may be designed for controlled post-failure fragments with a substantial cost savings...6-49.3.2. Platform Characteristics A platform for group mounted systems offers great flexibility in controlling the center of gravity of the

  10. LogLines. May-June 2009

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-06-01

    management of a former Navy- owned warehouse in Bahrain. “Today when folks in Bahrain requisition material from Kuwait, we y Army Staff Sgt. Thomas ...members who staff each section who provide the key in- gredient for sustaining world-class war ghter support. Navy Capt . Michelle Skubic, director...weapon systems. 23Loglines May - June 2009 Roberto Arenas and Ron Gay , tools and parts attendants at Defense Logistics Agency Cherry Point, N.C

  11. Occupational Conversion Index: Enlisted/Officer/Civilian

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-09-01

    14A/B OMA Integrated Weapons Technician AT 7975 APQ-126 FLR IMA Technician AT 7976 C-8!85 ASCU IMA Tecnnician AT 7978 APM-446 Radar System Test...Operator/Maintainer AT 6705 CASS Test Station Inter Main, Calibratiort/Adv Maint Technician AT 7923 ASCU & Tactical Computer SSE IMA Technician...GENERAL ARMY 93F Field Artillery Meteorological Crewmember NAVY AG Aerographer’s Mate AG 7412 Analyst-Forecaster MARINE CORPS 0847 a Artillery

  12. An Evaluation of Liquid Explosives for Foxhole Digging

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-04-01

    Silicone dioxide 1.93 - - Other x .76 - - Amonium nitrate - 49 80 Ammonia 9.95 - - Solid Ammonium perchlorate...1978 D D C AUG 24 1978 |j j - Av-’- US ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COMMAND LARGE CALIBER ’ WEAPON SYSTEMS LABORATORY DOVER. NEW...Entered) U& d <L$. UNr.T.ASSTFTFn SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAOEfWfun Palm Etttfd) 20. (Cont’d) After testing, the liquid NM/NE/RDX was

  13. A Comparative Analysis of the Resources Required for Test and Evaluation on Army-Led Weapon System Programs, Based Upon Program Size and Acquisition Management Complexity

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-12-01

    Program Manager PMO Program Manager Office POM Program Objective Memorandum PPE Personal Protective Equipment PPT Production Prove...test • Technical feasibility test • Engineering development test • Production prove-out test ( PPT ) • Software qualification test 22 • Live fire...improvement BIDS (P3I) system is equipped with a detection suite to include high volume samplers, a fluorescent particle counter/sizer, a flow

  14. Logistics: Implementation of Performance - Based Logistics for the Javelin Weapon System

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-03-07

    the c.ontext of each lice within the Automated Cost 24 Batimating-hTasgraled Tools ( ACEIT ) mode], the Army’s standard cost model, containing the EA was...fully validated the EA, The Javelin E.A was valihdted through an extensive review of the EA cost documentation in (te ACEIT file in coordination with... ACEIT file of the system cost estimate- This documentation was conndered to be suflicienT by the CEAC Director once the EA was determinmd to be valid

  15. Women in the Combat Zone - February 21 2007 - U.S. Department of Defense

    Science.gov Websites

    of the Global War on Terrorism exhibit Feb. 3 at the U.S. Army Women's Museum here. Story Female ; while serving in Afghanistan. Turner, from Springfield, Ore., and Ivanov, from Coos Bay, are female Image of a female U.S. Army Soldier standing with her weapon. Related Links Women in Military Service

  16. Proceedings of the Army Science Conference (14th) Held at the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York on 19-21 June 1984. Volume 3. Principal Authors P through Z.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-06-22

    relesel Distibution Unlimited .- -. POHLMANN, SHARP, AND WOOD systems is providing insight into the dynamics of molecular states in such fundamental ...ARR, Wash, DC 20310 Combat Support Systems Directorate, ATTN: DAMA-CSZ, Wash, DC 20310 Materiel Plans & Programs Directorate, ATTN: DAMA-PPF, Wash...DC 20310 Weapons Systems Directorate, ATTN: DAMA-WSZ, Wash, DC 20310 Office of the Chief of Engineers, ATTN: DAEN-RDZ-A, Wash, DC 20314 Office of the

  17. Just Scan It!-Weapon Reconstruction in Computed Tomography on Historical and Current Swiss Military Guns.

    PubMed

    Franckenberg, Sabine; Binder, Thomas; Bolliger, Stephan; Thali, Michael J; Ross, Steffen G

    2016-09-01

    Cross-sectional imaging, such as computed tomography, has been increasingly implemented in both historic and recent postmortem forensic investigations. It aids in determining cause and manner of death as well as in correlating injuries to possible weapons. This study illuminates the feasibility of reconstructing guns in computed tomography and gives a distinct overview of historic and recent Swiss Army guns.

  18. From Good to Great: Creating a Fires-Centric VMU Culture

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-04-07

    Anderson 2 Conclusion: Solutions ranging from low to high impact are available. At the low impact end of the spectrum, the summer .2011 transition... back to the end of Predator’s advanced concept technology demonstration (ACTO) phase. During the Predator’s 30 month ACTO the Army was largely...that the Marine Corps is experiencing the same growing pains that the Air Force experienced with its weaponized unmanned aerial systems (UAS). Major

  19. Major Automated Information Systems: Selected Defense Programs Need to Implement Key Acquisition Practices

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-03-01

    ledger accounting, payroll , and supply chain management. 4During our review, one of these programs—Air Force’s Air and Space Operations Center- Weapon...intended to provide an Army tactical biometric collection capability to capture an adversary or neutral person’s biometric data (e.g., fingerprint, iris...image, and facial image) and enroll them into DOD’s enterprise authoritative biometric database to positively identify and verify the identity of

  20. On the IDAGAM I Combat Model.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1977-06-01

    defense missions in locations between the FEBA and the attackers’ targets; b) AAA can attack only aircraft attacking the guns them- selves or the targets...the guns are defending; c) SAM weapon systems can attack not only aircraft attack- ing them and the targets they defend but also, although possibly...Corporation), P.E. Louer (Department of the Army) and B.R. McEnany (Joint Chiefs of Staff/Studies, Analysis and Gaming Agency) for their help- ful

  1. Current Simulation Methods in Military Systems Vulnerability Assessment

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-11-01

    Weapons * 1990: JASON Review of the Army Approach to Vulnerability Testing Many of the suggestions and recommendations made by these committees concern...damage vectors. Ongoing work by the JASONs 29 is also targeted to developing statistical methods for LF-test/SQuASH-model comparisons in Space 2]. We...Technical Report BRL-TR-3113, June 1990. 28. L. Tonnessen, A. Fries , L. Starkey and A. Stein, Live Fire Testing in the Evaluation of the Vulnerability of

  2. Joint Force Quarterly. Number 25, Summer 2000

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2000-09-01

    proficiency as well as familiarity with Allied army organiza- tion and weapons systems. There have been delays in some programs such as the MISTRAL air...second term but it also failed. No further coups were attempted until the civil war known as La Violencia effectively destroyed the elite political...balance be- tween Liberals and Conservatives in place since 1902. La Violencia began as a street riot in Bogota (known as Bogotazo) that erupted in the

  3. Considerations for Explosively Driven Conical Shock Tube Design: Computations and Experiments

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-02-16

    ARL-TR-7953 ● FEB 2017 US Army Research Laboratory Considerations for Explosively Driven Conical Shock Tube Design : Computations...The findings in this report are not to be construed as an official Department of the Army position unless so designated by other authorized...Considerations for Explosively Driven Conical Shock Tube Designs : Computations and Experiments by Joel B Stewart Weapons and Materials Research Directorate

  4. 2011 Army Strategic Planning Guidance

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-03-25

    TESI ) of 22,000 Soldiers, the Army’s total force by the end of the mid-term period is programmed to be 520K (AC). We will achieve a more...dwell ratios, extending TESI authority to adequately man deploying units and sustain the All-Volunteer Force, right-sizing the generating force, and... TESI Temporary End-Strength Increase WMD Weapons of Mass Destruction 2011 ARMY STRATEGIC PLANNING GUIDANCE Page 19 2011

  5. Characterization of Cyclohexanone Inclusions in Class 1 RDX

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-06-01

    characterized with respect to solvent inclusions in support of a U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL) program to model Multiscale Response of Energetic...pertinent to their modeling effort under the Multiscale Response of Energetic Materials (MREM) program, and the Weapons and Materials Research...support of a U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL) initiative called “ Multiscale Modeling of Energetic Materials” (MREM). The MREM program aims, for

  6. Consolidation of Fe-N Magnets Using Equal Channel Angular Extrusion

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-03-23

    Consolidation of Fe-N Magnets Using Equal Channel Angular Extrusion SG Sankar Advanced Materials Corporation (AMC), Pittsburgh, PA LJ Kecskes Weapons and...at the US Army Research Laboratory (ARL), Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland. Unlike conventional...Widenmeyer M, Hansen TC, Niewa R. Formation and decomposition of metastable α’’-Fe16N2 from in-situ powder neutron diffraction and thermal analysis. Zeit

  7. Politics and Didactics of Peace Education: "Securing Peace in the Nuclear Age--The Case of the Neutron Weapon". A Course for Political Instruction in Schools in Hessen.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Krell, Gert

    1980-01-01

    Describes a course developed for the public schools of Hessen, Germany, through the cooperative efforts of army officers, peace researchers, and educators. Information is presented on goals and contents of peace education as a part of political education, learning goals, course sequence, and content related to the neutron weapons controversy. (DB)

  8. Rapid Response in the Homeland

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-12-11

    SNG State National Guard USNG United States National Guard USNORTHCOM US Northern Command WMD Weapons of Mass Destruction WMD-CST Weapons of Mass...Guard exists simultaneously as two forces, the National Guard of the United States (USNG) and the state National Guard ( SNG ). The USNG is a reserve...9 military force composed of SNG militia members and is a joint reserve component of the United States Army and the United States Air Force. The

  9. Integrated cockpit design for the Army helicopter improvement program

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Drennen, T.; Bowen, B.

    1984-01-01

    The main Army Helicopter Improvement Program (AHIP) mission is to navigate precisely, locate targets accurately, communicate their position to other battlefield elements, and to designate them for laser guided weapons. The onboard navigation and mast-mounted sight (MMS) avionics enable accurate tracking of current aircraft position and subsequent target location. The AHIP crewstation development was based on extensive mission/task analysis, function allocation, total system design, and test and verification. The avionics requirements to meet the mission was limited by the existing aircraft structural and performance characteristics and resultant space, weight, and power restrictions. These limitations and night operations requirement led to the use of night vision goggles. The combination of these requirements and limitations dictated an integrated control/display approach using multifunction displays and controls.

  10. Automatic Ammunition Identification Technology Project

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Weil, B.

    1993-01-01

    The Automatic Ammunition Identification Technology (AAIT) Project is an activity of the Robotics Process Systems Division at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) for the US Army's Project Manager-Ammunition Logistics (PM-AMMOLOG) at the Picatinny Arsenal in Picatinny, New Jersey. The project objective is to evaluate new two-dimensional bar code symbologies for potential use in ammunition logistics systems and automated reloading equipment. These new symbologies are a significant improvement over typical linear bar codes since machine-readable alphanumeric messages up to 2000 characters long are achievable. These compressed data symbologies are expected to significantly improve logistics and inventory management tasks and permitmore » automated feeding and handling of ammunition to weapon systems. The results will be increased throughout capability, better inventory control, reduction of human error, lower operation and support costs, and a more timely re-supply of various weapon systems. This paper will describe the capabilities of existing compressed data symbologies and the symbol testing activities being conducted at ORNL for the AAIT Project.« less

  11. Reliability testing of the Hughes temperature controlled 1/4 watt split cycle cryogenic cooler (HD-1045 (V)/UA)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shaffer, James; Dunmire, Howard; Samuels, Raemon; Trively, Martin

    1989-12-01

    The U.S. Army CECOM Center for Night Vision and Electro-Optics (C2NVEO) is responsible for developing cryogenic coolers for all infrared imaging systems for the Army. C2NVEO also maintains configuration management control of the forward-looking infrared (FLIR) Common Module coolers used in thermal imagers in fielded Army weapon systems such as: M60A3 and M1 Tanks, Bradley Fighting Vehicle (BFV) System, tube-launched, optically tracked, wire-guided (TOW) Missile System, and Army Attack Helicopters. Currently, there are over 30,000 coolers in fielded systems and several thousand more are added each year. C2NVEO conducts development programs and monitors contractor internal research and development efforts to improve cooler performance such as reliability, audio noise, power consumption, and output vibration. The HD-1045 1/4-Watt Split Stirling Cooler was originally designed and developed by the C2NVEO in the early 1970s as a replacement for the gas bottle/cryostat used on the Manportable Common Thermal Night Sights. To date, however, the HD-1045 cooler has been used in the field in the Integrated Sight Unit (ISU) of the BFV System and is currently being used in the Driver Thermal Viewer (DTV) full scale development program. This document describes and reports the results of reliability testing done on Hughes Temperature Controlled 1/4 Watt split Cycle Cryogenic Coolers (HD-1045 (V)/UA), referred to herein as the coolers.

  12. Nuclear Weapons Effects on Army Tactical Systems. Volume 1. Overview

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1979-04-01

    UNCLASSI I I E >D ICV.RI , CLAISGFICAIO04 or TRIS v f, I t’,, *I tn, ) REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE ..... ro"..,T.UV IOR REP041 UM"ER . oOVI ACCESSION NO...Effects on Archimy. e ~ Tactical System!p- e . -,- o 0. CON . on GRANT NUMBER(., Joseph J. Halpin (also ed.) John P. Swirczynski (also ed.) D 212 112...THIS PAGE(7h"n Va0m Ent..’. E ) FOREWORD This document describes the general insights and the key issues for the nuclear survivability of tactical

  13. Proceedings of the US Army Symposium on Gun Dynamics (2nd), Held at the Institute on Man and Science, Rensselaerville, N.Y. 19-22 September 1978

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-09-01

    Alamo Avenue, S.E. Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106 ABSTRACT: A system for measuring the angular motion of the muzzle of artil- lery weapons during firing...0051, while the author was at EG&G, Inc., Albuquerque Operations, Albuquerque, New Mexico . 01 1-33 COX AND HOKANSON TITLE: Muzzle Motions of the M68...1978. DEGREES HELD: B.A. Chemical Engineer, New Mexico State University, University Park, New Mexico . 1 II1-34 COUNTER RECOIL SYSTEM EFFECTS ON

  14. Nonlethal weapons as force options for the Army

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Alexander, J.B.

    This paper suggests that future challenges to US national security will be very different from those previously experienced. In a number of foreseeable circumstances, conventional military force will be inappropriate. The National Command Authority, and other appropriate levels of command, need expanded options available to meet threats for which the application of massive lethal force is counterproductive or inadvisable. It is proposed that nonlethal concepts be developed that provide additional options for military leaders and politicians. Included in this initiative should be exploration of policy, strategy, doctrine, and training issues as well as the development of selected technologies and weapons.more » In addition, civilian law enforcement agencies have similar requirements for less-than-lethal systems. This may be an excellent example for a joint technology development venture.« less

  15. Assessment of Environmental and Occupational Health Impacts in Munitions and Weapon Systems Development: A Phased Approach

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-12-01

    Human Health Impacts of New Energetic Compounds. • Models – QSARs • In vitro toxicology • In vivo toxicology • Aligned with RDT&E level of...D.A.B.T. Health Effects Research Program Directorate of Toxicology Army Institute of Public Health UNCLASSIFIED Report Documentation Page Form...program. Early in the research stage models are primarily relied upon (e.g. QSAR approaches) and as the technology progresses, a greater reliance is

  16. Targeting the Soviet Army along the Sino-Soviet Border. Sanitized

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-03-31

    consisting usually of larches, pines, firs and spruces . Over 75’ of Eastern Siberia and 49% of the Far East economic region are forested, the densest...momentum of the Soviet strategic progra’i in both quality, diversity and numbers of systems. New high throwight missiles. are being introduced...model area in defense alert and maneuver scenario 1!./114 14 Site/weapons ratios for targetl~ag defense alert sites 121 15 Outlays fir offensive alert

  17. Parameters. US Army War College Quarterly. Volume 25. Number 1. Spring 1995,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1995-01-01

    major reason the fratricide rate remains so high is that imperfect human skills and judgment needed to employ weapon systems quickly degrade under...and rehearsals before the Desert Storm ground campaign, the residual rate of fratricide remained unacceptably high. Nor are the high rates at our combat...California State University, Fullerton. He is the editor and an author of The Search For Strategy: Politics and Strategic Vision. Spring 1995 31 Haiti, Peru

  18. Approximate Probabilistic Methods for Survivability/Vulnerability Analysis of Strategic Structures.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-07-15

    weapon yield, in kilotons; K = energy coupling factor; C = coefficient determined from linear regression; a, b = exponents determined from linear...hn(l + .582 00 = 0.54 In the case of the applied pressure, according to Perret and Bass (1975), the variabilities in the exponents a and b of Eq. 32...ATTN: WESSF, L. Ingram ATTN: ATC-T ATTN: Library ATTN: F. Brown BMD Systems Command ATTN: J. Strange Deoartment of the Army ATTN: BMDSC-H, N. Hurst

  19. High Strength, Nano-Structured Mg-Al-Zn Alloy

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-01-01

    ADDRESS(ES) 6. AUTHORS 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAMES AND ADDRESSES U.S. Army Research Office P.O. Box 12211 Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-2211...University of California, Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA b Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, U.S. Army Research Laboratory...being researched and implemented. To that effect,muchprogress has been achieved in thedevelopment of high strengthMg alloys through solid solution

  20. Landmines on the Table: A Negotiations Analysis of the Global Campaign to Ban Landmines

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-12-01

    regard landmines as very cheap and effective weapons in defending troops and non-protected land against insurgents or attacking armies. The...weapons, including any which may be deemed to be excessively injurious or to have indiscriminate effects ‖ (UNGA, 1977). Resolution 32/152 paved the...Excessively Injurious or to Have Indiscriminate Effects ‖ (CCW) and its annexed Protocols, of which Protocol II dealt specifically with landmines. The US

  1. Limiting Regret: Building the Army We Will Need

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-08-18

    Recently, U.S. and Chinese experts have estimated that the North Koreans may be able to produce enough fissionable plutonium and uranium to build up...long-range missiles, but their recently revealed ability to separate uranium could give them the ability to build gun-assembled fission weapons similar...weapons programs and living up to their international obligations.” 36North Korea has had a uranium enrichment capacity since at least November 2010

  2. Automation of wear analysis for large caliber weapons

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Salafia, Dominick; DeLeon, Norberto L.; Outlaw, James F.

    1999-12-01

    As part of the Test and Evaluation Command (TECOM) the Metrology and Simulation Division (MT-MS) at the U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground (USAYPG) has the mission to measure and record the wear effects of conventional and experimental munitions on large caliber weapons. The primary objective is to ensure that the weapon to be fired will safely meet the mission requirements for the quantity and energy of the munitions under live fire testing. Currently, there are two criteria used to "deadline" a weapon. One is the actual physical wear tolerance. The other relates to the energy (zone) expended by the round and the subsequent fatigue induced in the microstructure of the gun tube. The latter is referred to as the Equivalent Full Charge (EFC) for the particular round. In order to maximize safety and reduce the time required to manually search records for the appropriate level of useful life, the Measurements and Simulation Branch of MT-MS at USAYPG has made use of the installation network such that critical information may be accessed from the local area network or the Internet. An electronic database has been constructed and the query routines have been written so that systems test personnel, test directors (TD), and other government organizations may conduct a search for a particular weapon. The user may enter specifications such as percent physical life, percent EFC life, caliber, model, modifications, and serial number or any combination thereof. This paper is intended to inform the engineering and scientific community, engaged in weapons performance evaluation using simulations and field testing, of the existence of wear analysis automation for large caliber weapons.

  3. Thermal weapon sights with integrated fire control computers: algorithms and experiences

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rothe, Hendrik; Graswald, Markus; Breiter, Rainer

    2008-04-01

    The HuntIR long range thermal weapon sight of AIM is deployed in various out of area missions since 2004 as a part of the German Future Infantryman system (IdZ). In 2007 AIM fielded RangIR as upgrade with integrated laser Range finder (LRF), digital magnetic compass (DMC) and fire control unit (FCU). RangIR fills the capability gaps of day/night fire control for grenade machine guns (GMG) and the enhanced system of the IdZ. Due to proven expertise and proprietary methods in fire control, fast access to military trials for optimisation loops and similar hardware platforms, AIM and the University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg (HSU) decided to team for the development of suitable fire control algorithms. The pronounced ballistic trajectory of the 40mm GMG requires most accurate FCU-solutions specifically for air burst ammunition (ABM) and is most sensitive to faint effects like levelling or firing up/downhill. This weapon was therefore selected to validate the quality of the FCU hard- and software under relevant military conditions. For exterior ballistics the modified point mass model according to STANAG 4355 is used. The differential equations of motions are solved numerically, the two point boundary value problem is solved iteratively. Computing time varies according to the precision needed and is typical in the range from 0.1 - 0.5 seconds. RangIR provided outstanding hit accuracy including ABM fuze timing in various trials of the German Army and allied partners in 2007 and is now ready for series production. This paper deals mainly with the fundamentals of the fire control algorithms and shows how to implement them in combination with any DSP-equipped thermal weapon sights (TWS) in a variety of light supporting weapon systems.

  4. U.S. Army Corrosion Office's storage and quality requirements for military MEMS program

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zunino, J. L., III; Skelton, D. R.

    2007-04-01

    As the Army transforms into a more lethal, lighter and agile force, the technologies that support these systems must decrease in size while increasing in intelligence. Micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) are one such technology that the Army and DOD will rely on heavily to accomplish these objectives. Conditions for utilization of MEMS by the military are unique. Operational and storage environments for the military are significantly different than those found in the commercial sector. Issues unique to the military include; high G-forces during gun launch, extreme temperature and humidity ranges, extended periods of inactivity (20 years plus) and interaction with explosives and propellants. The military operational environments in which MEMS will be stored or required to function are extreme and far surpass any commercial operating conditions. Security and encryption are a must for all MEMS communication, tracking, or data reporting devices employed by the military. Current and future military applications of MEMS devices include safety and arming devices, fuzing devices, various guidance systems, sensors/detectors, inertial measurement units, tracking devices, radio frequency devices, wireless Radio Frequency Identifications (RFIDs) and network systems, GPS's, radar systems, mobile base systems and information technology. MEMS embedded into these weapons systems will provide the military with new levels of speed, awareness, lethality, and information dissemination. The system capabilities enhanced by MEMS will translate directly into tactical and strategic military advantages.

  5. The Role of the U.S. Army in Air Sea Battle

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-04-01

    areas are significant as they involve one or more nations that have nuclear weapons. China and North Korea stand out as being the most likely sources... nuclear threat that North Korea poses is not just from the potential use of its own arsenal of weapons and missiles but also from its continued efforts...and resource competition. They include high-intensity ground combat with North Korea or the collapse of the North Korean regime, or conflict with

  6. The Effects of Pakistan’s Nuclear Weapons on Civil-Military Relations in India

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-01-01

    just helped sustain a lack of strategic thought.14 Former vice-chief of the Indian army, Vijay Oberoi, observed that the military was always viewed...forces.76 Underscoring concerns about Pakistan’s growing nuclear weapons capability, another senior military official, Gen V. N. Sharma , remarked that... Vijay , was marked by three phases. The initial phase began in early May 1999, during which Indian soldiers suf- fered heavy casualties and most Indian

  7. Shoreline Erosion and Proposed Control at Experimental Facility 15-Spesutie Island

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-09-01

    Island, it is made up of various facilities and ranges designed for weapons testing as well as automotive testing . These ranges belong to the...ARL-SR-0383 ● SEP 2017 US Army Research Laboratory Shoreline Erosion and Proposed Control at Experimental Facility 15–Spesutie...in this report are not to be construed as an official Department of the Army position unless so designated by other authorized documents. Citation

  8. Development of Antimicrobial Coatings by Atmospheric Pressure Plasma Using a Guanidine-Based Precursor

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-10-29

    or approval of the use thereof. Destroy this report when it is no longer needed. Do not return it to the originator. Army Research Laboratory...Leadore, and Daphne D. Pappas Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, ARL A reprint from ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces...NUMBER 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) U.S. Army Research Laboratory ATTN: RDRL-WMM-C Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21005-5069 8

  9. Experimental Determination of Physical Properties of DNGU, TNBA, LLM-105, HK-56, and DNP

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-09-01

    ARL-TN-0788 ● SEP 2016 US Army Research Laboratory Experimental Determination of Physical Properties of DNGU, TNBA, LLM-105, HK...NOTICES Disclaimers The findings in this report are not to be construed as an official Department of the Army position unless so designated by... Experimental Determination of Physical Properties of DNGU, TNBA, LLM-105, HK-56, and DNP by Rose A Pesce-Rodriguez Weapons and Materials

  10. Lead Exposures and Biological Responses in Military Weapons Systems: Aerosol Characteristics and Acute Lead Effects among U.S. Army Artilleryman - Final Report

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-03-01

    change in hematocra from BL to IPE and the change in blood lead concentration from BL to DPE ........................ 87 32 Relationship between the...change in hematocrit from IPE to DPE and the change in blood lead concentration from BL to DPE ....................... 87 33 Relationship between the...change in FEP concentration from BL to IPE and the change in blood lead concentration from BL to DPE ................. 89 34 Relationship between the

  11. Program Manager: Journal of the Defense Systems Management College. Volume 17, Number 6, October-November 1988

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-12-01

    The net take personnel from other activities; Navy HARDMAN , the Army MAN- effect of these requirements will be to one way is to make sure new weapons... rates of return. But, developing our argument we will use a number of terms as a rule, opportunities for faster growth of wealth occur common to the...perfor- mance are the amount, quality, and consistency of the return it produces, on debt, depreciation, and taxes are Dupont Formula over time, on total

  12. Proceedings of the Annual U.S. Army Operations Research Symposium (12th) , 2-5 October 1973. Volume 1

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1973-01-01

    of technical and data problems. In brief, some of the deficiencies are associated with (a) the use of the "firepower score" force ratio concept as the...ficantly different attrition of different weapon systems (which "" "leads to deficiencies in the dynamic modeling of campaigns of any duration, and to...performed during June and July. Although the BATTLE model will eliminate some of the deficiencies in existing models, it is important to recognize that

  13. Improving U. S. Army Analysis of Alternatives to Better Address the Weapon Systems Acquisition Reform Act of 2009

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-05-01

    COTS equipment, and determine that no private sector or government organization can better support the function (DoDI 5000.02, 2008). OSD will ensure...address U.S. standards, U.S. government -furnished equipment (GFE) (e.g., radios), or U.S. manufacturing sites. Modifications may also be required to...Services, Congress, and Government Accountability Office (GAO) are inquiring about the results of AoAs. 3. How do you think AoAs should be tailored for

  14. 45th Annual Targets, UAVs and Range Operations Symposium and Exhibition - Tools and Technologies for the Warfighter. Volume 2. Wednesday

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-10-31

    ENGINEER Ms. Jo-An Williams FINANCE Ms. Leanne Green CONTRACTING Mr. Ken Hislop QF-16 Ms. Lee Neugin QF-4 Mr. Jim Cornwell AFSAT Ms. Audrea Feist DEPUTY...Target Program Manager: Mr. Ken Hislop Description Fullscale Target for Threat-Representative Weapon System Evaluation Meets USAF, Army, Navy, Allied Test...1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Approved for Public Release: Control No. UMS-2007-927, October 2007 6 A Solid Future for Unmanned Missions

  15. U.S. Air Forces Aerial Spray Mission: Should the Department of Defense Continue to Operate this Weapon of Mass Dispersion

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-12-01

    pesticide application over farm fields to produce a better crop.2 On 3 August 1921 in a joint effort between the U.S. Army Signal Corps in Dayton, Ohio... pesticide dissemination because of the relatively small amount of product needed to spray for nuisance insects over a vast area. The ULV system is... pesticide per minute. Applications that require massive amounts of liquid herbicide to neutralize cheatgrass and other fire-prone, invasive vegetation on

  16. Proceedings of the Conference on the Design of Experiments in Army Research Development and Testing (36th)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-08-01

    and pressure data collected during the four seasons at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico , are converted for use in artillery surface-to-surface...155-mm weapon system fired at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico , did not reach an apogee of 30 km. For the low-angle simulations, the projectile...Range, Now Mexico , during 1989. A sample of 226 rawinsonde flighto containing representative sets for each of the four seasons is used an the met data

  17. Final Environmental Assessment: For the M270 Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS) Expanded Training Use Areas at Avon Park Air Force Range, Florida

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-11-10

    Florida Final Environmental Assessment VOC Volatile Organic Compound WSF Weapon Safety Footprint WWII World War II Executive Summary 11/10/05 M270...Air Force, 2003b). World War I brought military training camps and flying schools to Florida, and stimulated shipbuilding, agriculture, and...turpentine operations. Increased defense spending for World War II expanded industry and agriculture further. Avon Park Army Air Field was built from

  18. Compatibility of Silicone-Based Brake Fluids with Elastomeric Components of Army Vehicles and Weapon Systems.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-02-01

    propylene rubber) EPDM Brake valve parts and seals 80 EPDM (SAE, RM 69) Referee test slabs 70L VITON 0-rings 70 TN4 -i______ - -.- . .J....... TABLE 2...separated. The volume and hardness of two rubber test specimens was determined. One specimen was placed in the lower fluid layer (conventional fluid...and one specimen was suspended horizontally in the top fluid layer (silicone). The jar was stored on the laboratory shelf at ambient temperature. The

  19. DARPA super resolution vision system (SRVS) robust turbulence data collection and analysis

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Espinola, Richard L.; Leonard, Kevin R.; Thompson, Roger; Tofsted, David; D'Arcy, Sean

    2014-05-01

    Atmospheric turbulence degrades the range performance of military imaging systems, specifically those intended for long range, ground-to-ground target identification. The recent Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Super Resolution Vision System (SRVS) program developed novel post-processing system components to mitigate turbulence effects on visible and infrared sensor systems. As part of the program, the US Army RDECOM CERDEC NVESD and the US Army Research Laboratory Computational & Information Sciences Directorate (CISD) collaborated on a field collection and atmospheric characterization of a two-handed weapon identification dataset through a diurnal cycle for a variety of ranges and sensor systems. The robust dataset is useful in developing new models and simulations of turbulence, as well for providing as a standard baseline for comparison of sensor systems in the presence of turbulence degradation and mitigation. In this paper, we describe the field collection and atmospheric characterization and present the robust dataset to the defense, sensing, and security community. In addition, we present an expanded model validation of turbulence degradation using the field collected video sequences.

  20. So Near and Yet So Far: Choices and Consequences of the Stand-In and Stand-Off Approach

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-06-01

    progress cost over 4.5 million Red Army personnel killed, and over 8 million injured.5 There was one refrain coming from Soviet leaders directed at the...Union would have approximately 100 atomic weapons by the middle of 1953.23 It was also during this time, from 1953 to 1957, that Soviet military...100 atomic weapons and possibly as many as 200. 29 In November 1953 , SHAPE, “notified its three regional commands that growing stockpiles of atomic

  1. Environmental Assessment: Addressing Construction Projects at Niagara Falls Air Reserve Station, New York

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-07-01

    Aeronautical Research Center missile site (Site 5), JP-4 tank truck spill (Site 7) at the eastern end of Taxiway A, Building 202 Drum Storage Yard (Site...BNOISE2. BNOISE2 was developed by the . U.S. Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratory for the Operational Noise to assess large arms weapons...was estimated using the OneShot component of BNOISE2. Per AR 200-1, if there are multiple weapon types fired from one location, the single-event

  2. Combining SBR systems for chemical and biological treatment: the destruction of the nerve agent VX.

    PubMed

    Irvine, R L; Haraburda, S S; Galbis-Reig, C

    2004-01-01

    The US Army is pilot testing the neutralization of VX nerve agent stockpiled at Newport, Indiana using caustic hydrolysis in a Sequencing Batch Reactor (SBR). The resulting hydrolysate was tested at the bench-scale for treatment with activated sludge biodegradation in two distinct studies, one in the SBR and another, in the PACT process. The feed to both biological systems was pretreated to enhance the biodegradability of the hydrolysis products. Both biodegradation studies demonstrated that the hydrolysate could easily meet the Chemical Weapons Convention treaty and US environmental regulations following pretreatment.

  3. Mobilization and Defense Management Technical Report Series. Effective Integration of Faculty Requirements into Army System Acquisition Programs.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-05-01

    following general conclusions: a. ’fle AM sytem for the acquisition of new weapons system and equipment as well as restructuring of ognztnsto include the...overallprogram iepmtim MFea - Abm #~ Ifiobd is =OWe bW decision W"Me to met their r~i~ Utia Mar oerall Arsy progrm ememktian 2is con be mwil viOULtud In a...uQeNt efru to inorporate detailed facility mqal..t fatos into every NS element of sytem acquisition, e.g., -u Us, WA, TAP OP. 57 ~ (-. ~.L g. Increase

  4. Mammalian Toxicology Testing: Problem Definition Study. Part 1. Comparative Analysis Report.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-03-01

    Requirements continued- 20. AfT’AC? (CaEtas roWm W SM N tw@"W 41011 iadnit y Slock nmanner) >Global Army mammalian toxicology testing requirements were...for viewing the Army’s toxico - logical requirements which takes into account the materiel requirements itself, changes in requirements over the...Almost 1,700 chemicals were estimated Lo be in the Research, Development, Test & Engineering cycle, 200 weapons were found to potentially represent

  5. Influence of Test Section Geometry on the Blast Environment in an Explosively Driven Conical Shock Tube

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2018-03-30

    ARL-TR-8335•MAR 2018 US Army Research Laboratory Influence of Test Section Geometry on theBlast Environment in an Explosively DrivenConical Shock...ARL-TR-8335•MAR 2018 US Army Research Laboratory Influence of Test Section Geometry on theBlast Environment in an Explosively DrivenConical Shock...Tube by Joel B Stewart Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, ARL Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. REPORT DOCUMENTATION

  6. Potential Science and Technology Game Changers for the Ground Warfare of 2050: Selected Projections Made in 2017

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2018-02-01

    ARL-TR-8283 ● FEB 2018 US Army Research Laboratory Potential Science and Technology Game Changers for the Ground Warfare of 2050...report when it is no longer needed. Do not return it to the originator. ARL-TR-8283 ● FEB 2018 US Army Research Laboratory Potential...ARL Kwong Choi and Joseph Mait Sensors and Electron Devices Directorate, ARL Brad Forch and Shashi Karna Weapons and Materials Research

  7. Toward Combined Arms Warfare: A Survey of 20th-Century Tactics, Doctrine, and Organization

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-08-01

    understandLng and cooperation, but a much greater confidence on the part of the infantry. Next, BruckmiEller allocated .different weapons against different...Army prevented major changes In equipment and organization until the mid-1930s. Then the army was able to use public works funds allocated to...of firepower and frontage that should be allocated per man and per unit, the proportion of artillery and transportation that should support the

  8. Should the U.S. Army Adopt New 5.56mm Ammunition Cartridge Designs to Reduce Overall Ammunition Weight?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-06-10

    developing alternative materials or configurations for ammunition cases.4 By using suitable widely available lightweight materials in the case of these...and civilian weapons manufacturers’ materials are accurate. The 5.56mm cartridge will still be the primary caliber of ammunition used in U.S. Army...in this case). External ballistics refers to all events concerning a projectile after it leaves the launcher, or barrel , and before achieves

  9. Assessment of Arms, Ammunition, and Explosives Accountability and Control; Security Assistance; and Sustainment for the Afghan National Security Forces

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-10-24

    COMMANDER, U.S. ARMY MATERIAL COMMAND LOGISTICS SUPPORT ACTIVITY Department of Defense Office of Inspector General Report No. SPO-2009...report the serial numbers of weapons it controlled to the DoD SA/LW Registry maintained by the U.S. Army Material Command Logistics Support... Material Command Logistics Support Activity assist the Combined Security Transition Command- Afghanistan in reporting serial numbers for U.S.-supplied

  10. Consumer of concern early entry program (C-CEEP): protecting against the biological suicidal warfare host

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Fish, Janet D.

    2014-05-01

    Man has used poisons for assassination purposes ever since the dawn of civilization, not only against individual enemies but also occasionally against armies. According to (Frischknecht, 2003)11 article on the History of Biological Warfare, during the past century, more than 500 million people died of infectious diseases. Several tens of thousands of these deaths were due to the deliberate release of pathogens or toxins. Two international treaties outlawed biological weapons in 1925 and 1972, but they have largely failed to stop countries from conducting offensive weapons research and large-scale production of biological weapons. Before the 20th century, biological warfare took on three main forms: (1) deliberate poisoning of food and water with infectious material, (2) use of microorganisms or toxins in some form of weapon system, and (3) use of biologically inoculated fabrics (Dire, 2013)8. This action plan is aimed at the recognition of the lack of current processes in place under an unidentified lead agency to detect, identify, track, and contain biological agents that can enter into the United States through a human host. This action plan program has been identified as the Consumer of Concern Early Entry Program or a simpler title is C-CEEP.

  11. Army Programmatic Environmental Assessment of the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) Vehicle Program

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-12-01

    vehicles  with  a  blast  resistant  V‐shaped underbody designed to protect the crew from mine blasts, fragments  and direct  fire  weapons.  The CAT I vehicle...Army Programmatic Environmental  Assessment   of the  Mine  Resistant  Ambush Protected (MRAP)  Vehicle Program        December 2010...06-07-2010 to 20-11-2010 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Army Programmatic Environmental Assessment of the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) Vehicle

  12. Organizing safety: conditions for successful information assurance programs.

    PubMed

    Collmann, Jeff; Coleman, Johnathan; Sostrom, Kristen; Wright, Willie

    2004-01-01

    Organizations must continuously seek safety. When considering computerized health information systems, "safety" includes protecting the integrity, confidentiality, and availability of information assets such as patient information, key components of the technical information system, and critical personnel. "High Reliability Theory" (HRT) argues that organizations with strong leadership support, continuous training, redundant safety mechanisms, and "cultures of high reliability" can deploy and safely manage complex, risky technologies such as nuclear weapons systems or computerized health information systems. In preparation for the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996, the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Health Affairs), the Offices of the Surgeons General of the United States Army, Navy and Air Force, and the Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC), US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command sponsored organizational, doctrinal, and technical projects that individually and collectively promote conditions for a "culture of information assurance." These efforts include sponsoring the "P3 Working Group" (P3WG), an interdisciplinary, tri-service taskforce that reviewed all relevant Department of Defense (DoD), Miliary Health System (MHS), Army, Navy and Air Force policies for compliance with the HIPAA medical privacy and data security regulations; supporting development, training, and deployment of OCTAVE(sm), a self-directed information security risk assessment process; and sponsoring development of the Risk Information Management Resource (RIMR), a Web-enabled enterprise portal about health information assurance.

  13. [Etiology and prognosis of the eye traumas by war weapons in the Senegalese army].

    PubMed

    Seck, S M; Diakhaté, M; Ndiaye Sow, M N; Dieng, M; Agboton, G; Guèye, N N

    2017-02-01

    The aim of this work is to identify the main weapons causing eye injuries during the campaigns of the Senegalese army in the south of the country, as well as the prognosis of these traumas. This study is retrospective and concerns soldiers wounded by the weapons of war during the exercise of their mission within the Senegalese armed forces of 1991 in 2005. They are mainly soldiers affected in the south of the country during a war, clashes with the rebels or in Guinea-Bissau during operation Gabou in 1998. And they were evacuated to the ophthalmology department of the Principal Hospital in Dakar, which is a level 3. Thirty-seven military all male, with an average age of 30.5 years. Forty-six eyes including 9 bilateral cases. The trauma agent is a burst of RPG7 shells in 62% of cases, mine explosion in 13.5%, offensive grenade 10.8%, assault rifle 5.7% and flame lance-roquette anti-char (LRAC) accounts for 8%. We noted a phthisis of the globe for 14 eyes (30.43%) and for 15 eyes (32.60%) a functional loss of the affected globe. Inability to fight was decided by 29 wounded soldiers (78.37% of the cases), sedentary employment in 27 cases (72.97%) and 10 cases (27.03%) of reformed soldiers. In the conflict in southern Senegal, the RPG7 shell burst causes 62% of eye injuries. This RPG7 shell called "rebel weapon" is frequently used in conflicts in Africa. The prognosis of trauma with these types of weapons is severe. The combat goggles systematically integrated in the equipment of the Senegalese combatant, would be an invaluable contribution on the prevention of the traumatisms of the eye. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

  14. The Human Volunteer in Military Biomedical Research (Military Medical Ethics. Volume 2, Chapter 19)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2002-10-01

    was not de- classified until 1975. It applied only to human re- search in the fields of atomic, biological , and/or chemical warfare.11 In 1954 the Army...memo- randum applied to all human research, not only atomic, biological , or chemical testing.11 Even though this memorandum applied only to the Army...first peacetime nuclear weapons tests in the Bikini Atoll, until 1963, when atmospheric test- ing was halted by the Limited Test Ban Treaty, nu

  15. The Army’s Ground Combat Vehicle Program and Alternatives

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-04-01

    the M2A3 Bradley IFV used in Iraq, which includes reactive armor and underbelly armor. Weighta Number of Vehicle (Tons) Passengers Ground Combat...RCWS = remotely controlled weapon station; n.a. = not applicable. a. Version of the M2A3 Bradley IFV used in Iraq, which includes reactive armor and...trade-offs that the Army made to reduce the average procurement unit cost to $13.5 million (in 2013 dollars). b. Version of the M2A3 Bradley IFV used

  16. [Contagious diseases in the Austro-Hungarian Army during the First World War].

    PubMed

    Kiss, Gábor

    2010-01-01

    Before the WWI significantly more loss was caused to armies by various epidemies, than by weapons. Although as a result of development of medical sciences in the WWI this rate changed, the main epidemies namely cholera, malaria and trachoma still ravaged quite often. In spite of the fact, that alimentation of Austro-Hungarian soldiers gradually deteriorated during the war, so they fell victims more easily to diseases, the sanitary service successfully prevented outbreaks of larger epidemies.

  17. Allies of a Kind: Canadian Army-US Army Relations and the Korean War, 1950-1953

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-01-01

    lective debauch — the only unit action of its type by Canadians in the Korean War — outraged Stone and hardened his heart to complaints about food...weapons firing that by design drove the faint- hearted and unfit Patricias from his ranks. His program of forced attrition alarmed Canadian personnel...Detention Barracks 1st Canadian Field Security Service 25th Canadian Public Relations Unit 25th Canadian Field Dental Unit, RCDC Unless formally

  18. Nuclear Weapons Materials Gone Missing: What Does History Teach?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-11-01

    ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR(S) 5d. PROJECT NUMBER 5e. TASK NUMBER 5f. WORK UNIT NUMBER 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) U.S. Army War...Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College. The volume features re- search done over the last 2 years. Funding for this project came from the...Cochran: The statistical distribution of MUF will have a given one- sigma and two- sigma range. A MUF of zero does not mean that SNM [special nuclear

  19. Using hardware-in-the-loop (HWIL) simulation to provide low-cost testing of TMD IR missile systems

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Buford, James A., Jr.; Paone, Thad

    1998-07-01

    A greater awareness of and increased interest in the use of modeling and simulation (M&S) has been demonstrated at many levels within the Department of Defense (DoD) and all the Armed Services agencies in recent years. M&S application is regarded as a viable means of lowering the life cycle costs of theater missile defense (TMD) weapon system acquisition beginning with studies of new concepts of warfighting through user training and post-deployment support. The Missile Research, Engineering, and Development Center (MRDEC) of the U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Command (AMCOM) has an extensive history of applying all types of M&S to TMD weapon system development and has been a particularly strong advocate of hardware-in-the-loop (HWIL) simulation for many years. Over the past 10 years MRDEC has developed specific and dedicated HWIL capabilities for TMD applications in both the infrared and radio frequency sensor domains. This paper provides an overview of the infrared-based TMD HWIL missile facility known as the Imaging Infrared System Simulation (I2RSS) which is used to support the Theater High Altitude Air Defense (THAAD) missile system. This facility uses M&S to conduct daily THAAD HWIL missile simulations to support flight tests, missile/system development, independent verification and validation of weapon system embedded software and simulations, and missile/system performance against current and future threat environments. This paper describes the THAAD TMD HWIL role, process, major components, HWIL verification/validation, and daily HWIL support areas in terms of both missile and complete system.

  20. Fusion of radar and ultrasound sensors for concealed weapons detection

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Felber, Franklin S.; Davis, Herbert T., III; Mallon, Charles E.; Wild, Norbert C.

    1996-06-01

    An integrated radar and ultrasound sensor, capable of remotely detecting and imaging concealed weapons, is being developed. A modified frequency-agile, mine-detection radar is intended to specify with high probability of detection at ranges of 1 to 10 m which individuals in a moving crowd may be concealing metallic or nonmetallic weapons. Within about 1 to 5 m, the active ultrasound sensor is intended to enable a user to identify a concealed weapon on a moving person with low false-detection rate, achieved through a real-time centimeter-resolution image of the weapon. The goal for sensor fusion is to have the radar acquire concealed weapons at long ranges and seamlessly hand over tracking data to the ultrasound sensor for high-resolution imaging on a video monitor. We have demonstrated centimeter-resolution ultrasound images of metallic and non-metallic weapons concealed on a human at ranges over 1 m. Processing of the ultrasound images includes filters for noise, frequency, brightness, and contrast. A frequency-agile radar has been developed by JAYCOR under the U.S. Army Advanced Mine Detection Radar Program. The signature of an armed person, detected by this radar, differs appreciably from that of the same person unarmed.

  1. What Roles and Missions for Europe’s Military and Security Forces in the 21st Century?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-08-01

    Studies Dr. John L. Clarke vi Executive Summary Are armies the dinosaurs of the 21st Century, soon to become extinct in the new security environment? What...and 40-year old weapons systems. Dr. John L. Clarke 6 For many reasons , Europe’s armed forces are in a long-term period of decline, and this trend is...in a reasonable period of time and on a high level of interoperability. The capability of carrying out sophisticated operations with a high operational

  2. International Infantry and Joint Services Small Arms Systems Section Symposium, Exhibition and Firing Demonstration. Held in Atlantic City, NJ on 13-16 May 2002. Volume 2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2002-05-13

    Atlantic Council NATO Army Armaments Group 30mm x 173 Ammunition Family by Allan Buckley & Pierre H. Freymond, Oerlikon Contraves Pyrotec AG Thursday, 16 May...actual weapon w/o adding weight • Compatible with LASER-activated battle simulators (MILES) 5.56mm FX - NDIA 2002.PPT (15.05.02) (11) FX® Marking...construction and design – Packaging inspection – Interfaces – Weight – Final protective finish – Endurance at ambient – Rough handling – Workmanship

  3. 32 CFR 552.99 - Applicability.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... 32 National Defense 3 2010-07-01 2010-07-01 true Applicability. 552.99 Section 552.99 National Defense Department of Defense (Continued) DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY MILITARY RESERVATIONS AND NATIONAL CEMETERIES REGULATIONS AFFECTING MILITARY RESERVATIONS Firearms and Weapons § 552.99 Applicability. (a) The...

  4. 32 CFR 552.99 - Applicability.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... 32 National Defense 3 2012-07-01 2009-07-01 true Applicability. 552.99 Section 552.99 National Defense Department of Defense (Continued) DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY MILITARY RESERVATIONS AND NATIONAL CEMETERIES REGULATIONS AFFECTING MILITARY RESERVATIONS Firearms and Weapons § 552.99 Applicability. (a) The...

  5. Purification Efficacy of Synthetic Cannabinoid Conjugates Using High-Pressure Liquid Chromatography

    DTIC Science & Technology

    In the current study, we successfully purified several synthetic cannabinoid (SC):dark quencher conjugates essential for the success of the synthetic... cannabinoid detection platform developed at the US Army Research Laboratorys Weapons and Materials Research Directorate. The purification was

  6. Update to Computational Aspects of Nitrogen-Rich HEDMs

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-04-01

    ARL-TR-7656 ● APR 2016 US Army Research Laboratory Update to “Computational Aspects of Nitrogen -Rich HEDMs” by Betsy M...Computational Aspects of Nitrogen -Rich HEDMs” by Betsy M Rice, Edward FC Byrd, and William D Mattson Weapons and Materials Research Directorate...

  7. Terror Operations: Case Studies in Terrorism. U.S. Army DCSINT Handbook No. 1.01

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-08-15

    relevant resource. A selected bibliography presents citations for detailed study of specific terrorism topics. Unless stated otherwise, masculine ...of instability within the region include hegemony , terrorism, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and ballistic missiles. Conflict is a

  8. Analysis of gunshot residue test results in 112 suicides.

    PubMed

    Reed, G E; McGuire, P J; Boehm, A

    1990-01-01

    The results of gunshot residue (GSR) tests in 112 suicide cases investigated by the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command over a ten-year period are described. Only suicide cases in which there was certainty that the victim fired a weapon were examined in an effort to reduce ambiguous results. Previous case work research by Rudzitis indicated that positive GSR test results were encountered in suicides 62% of the time using various combinations of neutron activation analysis (NAA) and atomic absorption spectrophotometry (AAS). Threshold values of 0.2-micrograms antimony and 0.3-micrograms barium (0.2-micrograms antimony and 0.5-micrograms barium after 1985) used by the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Laboratory resulted in positive GSR results in suicide cases 38% of the time. The effects of time, location of body, handling of the body, weapon type, caliber, and condition of the hands on GSR results are examined. Case studies involving suicides by unit armorers are discussed.

  9. Theoretical modeling of the MILES hit profiles in military weapon low-data rate simulators

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Andrews, L. C.; Phillips, R. L.; Smith, C. A.; Belichki, S. B.; Crabbs, R.; Cofarro, J. T.; Fountain, W.; Tucker, F. M.; Parrish, B. J.

    2016-09-01

    Math modeling of a low-data-rate optical communication system is presented and compared with recent testing results over ranges up to 100 m in an indoor tunnel at Kennedy Space Center. Additional modeling of outdoor testing results at longer ranges in the open atmosphere is also presented. The system modeled is the Army's Multiple Integrated Laser Engagement System (MILES) that has been used as a tactical training system since the early 1980s. The objective of the current modeling and testing is to obtain target hit zone profiles for the M16A2/M4 rifles and establish a data baseline for MILES that will aid in its upgrade using more recently developed lasers and detectors.

  10. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Silvers, Kurt

    Program Manager Kurt Silvers helped protect the safety of U.S. troops who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan. PNNL researchers developed technology that monitored the battle-readiness of Hellfire II missiles onboard Army Apache helicopters. The technology continually monitors factors like vibration and temperature, providing key data when making decisions to deploy or retire weapons.

  11. 33 CFR 334.230 - Potomac River.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... 334.230 Navigation and Navigable Waters CORPS OF ENGINEERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE DANGER ZONE AND RESTRICTED AREA REGULATIONS § 334.230 Potomac River. (a) Naval Surface Weapons... except Sundays. (ii) When firing is in progress, no person, or fishing or oystering vessels shall operate...

  12. An analysis of cost overruns on defense acquisition contracts

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Christensen, David S.

    1994-01-01

    This article examines the history of cost overruns reported on 64 completed defense contracts. Its purpose is to formally test the observation of the Under Secretary. Results confirm the observation at the 95 percent level of confidence, and were generally insensitive to the contract type (price, cost), the contract phase (development, production), the type of weapon system (air, ground, sea), and the armed forces service (Air Force, Army, Navy) that managed the contract. After a review of terminology, concepts, and related research for those unfamiliar with the area, the methodology, results, and managerial implications are described.

  13. Test Planning, Collection, and Analysis of Pressure Data Resulting from Army Weapon Systems. Volume IV. Data Analysis of the M198 and M109 May 1979 Firings.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-05-01

    the M203 charge during May 1979 at Aberdeen Proving Ground . The data collection and analysis effort is part of a continuing program undertaken by...May to 18 May 1979 the M198 towed howitzer and the M109 self- propelled howitzer were fired with the 14203 charge at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds ...howitzer and the M109 self- propeiled howitzer were fired with the M203 charge at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds . This section of the report gives the

  14. The U.S. Army and Doctrine for Weapons of Mass Destruction: Consequence Management Operations.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1999-06-04

    Forces within section 7 Competency of witnesses 23 Construction Generally 1 With other laws 2 Estoppel 19 Exclusionary rule 22 Execution of laws 8...19. Estoppel Despite ruling in previous case that this section precluded prosecutions under section 231 of this title prohibiting attempts to

  15. 77 FR 12622 - Records Schedules; Availability and Request for Comments

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-03-01

    ... chemical weapons convention program records and protocol program records. 3. Department of Defense, Defense... disposition process is available on request. Schedules Pending 1. Department of the Army, Agency-wide (N1-AU... programs, housing, recreation, and travel. 2. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security, (N1...

  16. Strategic Importance of the US Army Veterinary Service in an NBC Environment

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1999-04-01

    all branches of the Department of Defense. That support includes food safety and quality assurance; zoonotic disease control and prevention; medical...environment as it relates to food safety and quality assurance. The focus of the paper is to examine the current threat from weapons of mass destruction

  17. LOCATING BURIED WW1 MUNITIONS WITH REMOTE SENSING AND GIS

    EPA Science Inventory

    During World War I, The American University in Washington D.C. was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitions including chemical weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite. After the end of t...

  18. REMOTE SENSING IN DETECTING BURIED MUNITIONS FROM WORLD WAR I

    EPA Science Inventory



    During World War I, The American University in Washington D.C. was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitions including chemical weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite, among othe...

  19. LOCATING BURIED WORLD WAR I MUNITIONS WITH REMOTE SENSING AND GIS

    EPA Science Inventory

    During World War I, the American University in Washington, D.C. was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitons including chemcial weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite. After the end of ...

  20. Belief in exposure to chemical and biological agents in Persian Gulf War soldiers.

    PubMed

    Stuart, John A; Ursano, Robert J; Fullerton, Carol S; Wessely, Simon

    2008-02-01

    This is the first longitudinal cohort study of Persian Gulf War US soldiers to examine belief in exposure to chemical and biological weapons before and shortly after combat. A longitudinal sample of n = 1250 male Persian Gulf War US Army soldiers were surveyed 3 to 4 months before and 6 to 10 months after the 1991 War. Six to 10 months after combat, 4.6% of the cohort believed they had been exposed to chemical and biological weapons. Adjusting for demographics only, those who reported a greater number of combat exposures (odds ratio, OR: 18.8), or higher combat stress (OR: 12.27) were more likely to believe they were exposed. Adjusting for all variables soldiers who reported higher combat stress continued to be most likely (OR: 6.58) to believe they had been exposed to chemical and biological weapons. Individuals reporting higher combat stress are at substantially greater risk of reporting they have been exposed to chemical or biological weapons.

  1. Selection of the thermal imaging approach for the XM29 combat rifle fire control system

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Brindley, Eric; Lillie, Jack; Plocki, Peter; Volz, Robert T.

    2003-09-01

    The paper briefly describes the XM29 (formerly OICW) weapon, its fire control system and the requirements for thermal imaging. System level constraints on the in-hand weight dictate the need for a high degree of integration with other elements of the system such as the laser rangefinder, direct view optics and daylight video, all operating at different wavelengths. The available Focal Plane Array technology choices are outlined and the evaluation process is described, including characterization at the US Army Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate (NVESD) and recent field-testing at Quantico USMC base, Virginia. This paper addresses the trade study, technology assessment and test-bed effort. The relationship between field and lab testing performance is compared and path forward recommended.

  2. Fabrication and Tests of M240 Machine Gun Barrels Lined with Stellite 25

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-04-01

    ARL-TR-7662 ● APR 2016 US Army Research Laboratory Fabrication and Tests of M240 Machine Gun Barrels Lined with Stellite 25...Fabrication and Tests of M240 Machine Gun Barrels Lined with Stellite 25 by William S de Rosset and Sean Fudger Weapons and Materials Research...

  3. Temperature and Concentration Profiles in Hydrogen-Nitrous Oxide Flames.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-07-01

    SECumvY CLASSIFICATION CF TIS PAGOE(hn Date. 3.,OCO 20. Abstract (Cont’d): est for flame modeler UNCLASSIFIED * SECURITY CL ASSIrIC ATION Or THIS P...Commander Naval Surface Weapons Center Commander ATTN: R. Bernecker, R-13 US Army Tank Automotive G.B. Wilmot , R-16 Command Silver Spring, MD 20902

  4. Metals Emissions from the Open Detonation Treatment of Energetic Wastes

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2004-10-01

    CPIA Publication 477, Vol. I, March 1988. p. 139. 12. Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division. "Fragment Breakup Testing of BLU-97 Bomblets with PBXN ...volume at the time the particulate sample was collected was approximately 106 m3. For unknown reasons, the Army did not convert the detonation plume

  5. Results of field testing with the FightSight infrared-based projectile tracking and weapon-fire characterization technology

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Snarski, Steve; Menozzi, Alberico; Sherrill, Todd; Volpe, Chris; Wille, Mark

    2010-04-01

    This paper describes experimental results from recent live-fire data collects that demonstrate the capability of a prototype system for projectile detection and tracking. This system, which is being developed at Applied Research Associates, Inc., under the FightSight program, consists of a high-speed thermal camera and sophisticated image processing algorithms to detect and track projectiles. The FightSight operational vision is automated situational intelligence to detect, track, and graphically map large-scale firefights and individual shooting events onto command and control (C2) systems in real time (shot location and direction, weapon ID, movements and trends). Gaining information on enemy-fire trajectories allows educated inferences on the enemy's intent, disposition, and strength. Our prototype projectile detection and tracking system has been tested at the Joint Readiness Training Center (Ft Polk, LA) during live-fire convoy and mortar registration exercises, in the summer of 2009. It was also tested during staged military-operations- on-urban-terrain (MOUT) firefight events at Aberdeen Test Center (Aberdeen, MD) under the Hostile Fire Defeat Army Technology Objective midterm experiment, also in the summer of 2009, where we introduced fusion with acoustic and EO sensors to provide 3D localization and near-real time display of firing events. Results are presented in this paper that demonstrate effective and accurate detection and localization of weapon fire (5.56mm, 7.62mm, .50cal, 81/120mm mortars, 40mm) in diverse and challenging environments (dust, heat, day and night, rain, arid open terrain, urban clutter). FightSight's operational capabilities demonstrated under these live-fire data collects can support closecombat scenarios. As development continues, FightSight will be able to feed C2 systems with a symbolic map of enemy actions.

  6. Applications of computational modeling in ballistics

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Sturek, Walter B.

    1987-01-01

    The development of the technology of ballistics as applied to gun launched Army weapon systems is the main objective of research at the U.S. Army Ballistic Research Laboratory (BRL). The primary research programs at the BRL consist of three major ballistic disciplines: exterior, interior, and terminal. The work done at the BRL in these areas was traditionally highly dependent on experimental testing. A considerable emphasis was placed on the development of computational modeling to augment the experimental testing in the development cycle; however, the impact of the computational modeling to this date is modest. With the availability of supercomputer computational resources recently installed at the BRL, a new emphasis on the application of computational modeling to ballistics technology is taking place. The major application areas are outlined which are receiving considerable attention at the BRL at present and to indicate the modeling approaches involved. An attempt was made to give some information as to the degree of success achieved and indicate the areas of greatest need.

  7. [Application of new technologies in the design, manufacture and use of technology deployment of field medical units and establishments].

    PubMed

    Iakovlev, S V; Sidorov, V A; Korniushko, I G; Medvedev, V R; Matveev, A G

    2011-11-01

    Presented data is about attendance means of deployment of field medical units and pieces of army-level medical services and disaster medicine Defense Ministry did not ensure compliance with requirements to create optimal conditions for highly effective work of the medical staff, placing the wounded, the use of modern aids and appliances. The prospects of creation of mobile unit for high-availability modular pre-fabricated on the basis of tent structures, pneumoconstructions and removable habitable bodies, containers, tents, pneumocovers till 2020 are analyzed. Livelihood systems provide armor protection against fragments, bullets, flames, damaging factors of chemical and biological weapons.

  8. THE ROLE OF REMOTE SENSING IN IDENTIFYING BURIED WORLD WAR 1 MUNITIONS AT THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C.

    EPA Science Inventory

    During World War 1, The American University in Washington D.C. was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitions including chemical weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite, among others. Afte...

  9. THE ROLE OF REMOTE SENSING IN IDENTIFYING BURIED WORLD WAR I MUNITIONS AT THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C.

    EPA Science Inventory

    During World War 1, The American University in Washington D.C. was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitions including chemical weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite, among others. Afte...

  10. Expanding Fixed-Wing Aircraft Capability in US Army Aviation Operations

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-06-12

    48 CHAPTER 5 FINDINGS AND RESULTS ...forces were being neglected by excessive reliance on nuclear weapons as a deterrent to war (Fowler 1990). In 1954, General Gavin wrote an influential...aircraft had deposited them as far forward as possible (Tolson 1989, 23). As a result of the Howze Board recommendations, the Department of Defense

  11. Index of Nuclear Weapon Effects Simulators. Sanitized

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-06-01

    124 TRESTLE Facility ..................................................... 125 Vertical EMP Simulator ( VEMPS ...82171 SIMULATOR: Vertical EMP Simulator ( VEMPS ) TYPE: EMP AGENCY: US Army LOCATION: HOL1.0’od ridge, V, Research Facility POINT OF CONTACT...DESCRIPTION: The VEMPS facility is I radiating elect, asettc pulse (EMP) stilateor used to expose test obJects to the simulated effects of high altitude EIP

  12. Spectrophotometer-Based Color Measurements

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-24

    public release; distribution is unlimited. AD U.S. ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH , DEVELOPMENT AND ENGINEERING CENTER Weapons and Software Engineering Center...for public release; distribution is unlimited. UNCLASSIFIED i CONTENTS Page Summary 1 Introduction 1 Methods , Assumptions, and Procedures 1...Values for Federal Color Standards 15 Distribution List 25 TABLES 1 Instrument precision 3 2 Method precision and operator variability 4 3

  13. Electrical Conductivity Measurements of Hydroxylammonium Nitrate: Design Considerations

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-04-01

    aqueous NaNO3 i• shown as well to indicate the similarity of this conductivity data with that cf HAN. The solubility of NaNO 3 in H120 is much less than... Wilmot , R-16 Commander Silver Spring, MD 20910 US Army Tank Automotive Command 1 Commander ATTN: AMSTA-TSL Naval Weapons Center Warren, MI 48397-5000

  14. United States Army Chemical Biological Radiological and Nuclear Corps Capability Combating the Contemporary Weapons of Mass Destruction Threat

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-06-08

    doctrine is as up to date as possible given the importance of this mission set. In establishing doctrine, doctrine writers must evaluate the ability...radiation and it also unable to identify the radioisotope present. While just being aware of the presence of radiation can be useful, this equipment is

  15. 33 CFR 334.1125 - Pacific Ocean Naval Air Weapons Station, Point Mugu, Small Arms Range, Ventura County, California...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-07-01

    ... Station, Point Mugu, Small Arms Range, Ventura County, California; danger zone. 334.1125 Section 334.1125 Navigation and Navigable Waters CORPS OF ENGINEERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE DANGER ZONE... Arms Range, Ventura County, California; danger zone. (a) The area. A triangular area extending...

  16. 33 CFR 334.1125 - Pacific Ocean Naval Air Weapons Station, Point Mugu, Small Arms Range, Ventura County, California...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... Station, Point Mugu, Small Arms Range, Ventura County, California; danger zone. 334.1125 Section 334.1125 Navigation and Navigable Waters CORPS OF ENGINEERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE DANGER ZONE... Arms Range, Ventura County, California; danger zone. (a) The area. A triangular area extending...

  17. 33 CFR 334.1125 - Pacific Ocean Naval Air Weapons Station, Point Mugu, Small Arms Range, Ventura County, California...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ... Station, Point Mugu, Small Arms Range, Ventura County, California; danger zone. 334.1125 Section 334.1125 Navigation and Navigable Waters CORPS OF ENGINEERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE DANGER ZONE... Arms Range, Ventura County, California; danger zone. (a) The area. A triangular area extending...

  18. Has Plan Colombia Ignored Neighboring Countries

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-06-01

    IGNORED NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES? Celso Andrade-Garzon Colonel, Ecuadorian Army, 1981 B.S., University of Loja , Ecuador , 1993 M.S., Institute of...neighboring countries of Ecuador and Venezuela, increasing border violence, population displacement and the creation of refugees, environmental damage...black market weapons trading and drug trafficking. This thesis uses trust and influence theory to analyze how Plan Colombia affects Ecuador and

  19. Normal D-Region Models for Weapon Effects Code

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-09-18

    ATTN: DNA REP) ATTN: DRSMI-YSO J GAMBLE ATTN: JLKS ATTN: JPTM US ARMY WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE ATTN: JPTP ATTN: STEWS -TE-N K CUMMINGS NATIONAL SECURITY... LAMB ATTN: G SMITH ATTN: F GILMORE ATTN: J VICKREY ATTN: M GANTSWEG ATTN: R LEADABRAND ATTN: W KARZAS ATTN: R TSUNODA ATTN: W CHESNUT a R & D ASSOCIATES

  20. THE ROLE OF REMOTE SENSING AND GIS IN IDENTIFYING BURIED WORLD WAR I MUNITIONS AT THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, DC

    EPA Science Inventory

    During World War 1, The American University in Washington D.C. was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitions including chemical weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite, among others. Afte...

  1. America's Atomic Army: The Historical Archaeology of Camp Desert Rock

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Susan R. Edwards

    2007-11-02

    Established in 1951, Camp Desert Rock served as the training ground for America's 'Atomic Army'. For the next six years, U.S. ground troops traveled to the Nevada desert to participate in military maneuvers during atmospheric atomic weapons testing. Nearly 60,000 soldiers received physical and psychological training in atomic warfare. Abandoned when atmospheric testing ended, Camp Desert Rock was dismantled and its buildings moved to other locations. Today, the camp appears as a sterile expanse of desert marked by rock-lined tent platforms, concrete foundations, and trash scatters. Although visually unimposing, the site is rich with the history of America's nuclear testingmore » program.« less

  2. Chemical Stockpile Disposal Program. Chemical Weapons Movement History Compilation.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-06-12

    Arsenal, Edgewood Arsenal, and Dugway Proving Ground . (2) The Army has transferred agent fram certain munitions into other containers or munitions...Aberdeen Proving Ground , Maryland (Historical Volume). - ~ - - - - -.. , 27. Sea Dump of 700 Tons of Lewisite and Mustard , NAD, Concord, California, 1958... Proving Ground , Maryland (Historical Volumes). 42. SITREP File, SFTCM II, 1980; Chemical Agent Identification Sets (CAIS) Historical File; Information

  3. Calculations of High-Current Characteristics of Silicon Diodes at Microwave Frequencies.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-10-01

    4,4rn .,,,1,v ’ + :.:: 60V, 104 UU ,... 55V’ •" :103 0i Figure 3. Peak forward current diensity as a function of applied frequency for various diode...8217.-,. ’ DRSMCLEP-L DISTRIBUTION (Cont’d) COMMANDER AIR FORCE WEAPONS LABORATORY US ARMY MISSILE COMMAND ATTN DR. BABU SINGARAJU, AFWL/NTC ATTN DRSMI- RHB , H

  4. THE ROLE OF HISTORICAL AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS IN THE REMEDIATION OF WWI CHEMICAL CONTAMINATION IN THE SPRING VALLEY SUPERFUND SITE, WASHINGTON, DC

    EPA Science Inventory

    During World War 1, The American University in Washington D.C. was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitions including chemical weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite, among others. Afte...

  5. THE ROLE OF THE REMOTE SENSING IN IDENTIFYING BURIED WORLD WAR I MUNITIONS AT THE AMERICAN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C.

    EPA Science Inventory



    During World War 1, The American University in Washington D.C. was used by the U.S. Army as an experiment station for the development and testing of a variety of battlefield munitions including chemical weapons such as Mustard Gas, Phosgene, Ricin and Lewisite, among othe...

  6. The DTIC Review: Volume 2, Number 4, Surviving Chemical and Biological Warfare

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1996-12-01

    CHROMATOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS, NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE, INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY , ARMY RESEARCH, DEGRADATION, VERIFICATION, MASS SPECTROSCOPY , LIQUID... mycotoxins . Such materials are not attractive as weapons of mass destruction however, as large amounts are required to produce lethal effects. In...VERIFICATION, ATOMIC ABSORPTION SPECTROSCOPY , ATOMIC ABSORPTION. AL The DTIC Review Defense Technical Information Center AD-A285 242 AD-A283 754 EDGEWOOO

  7. Methods for Analysis and Simulation of Ballistic Impact

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-04-01

    ARL-RP-0597 ● Apr 2017 US Army Research Laboratory Methods for Analysis and Simulation of Ballistic Impact by John D Clayton...Laboratory Methods for Analysis and Simulation of Ballistic Impact by John D Clayton Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, ARL...analytical, and numerical methods of ballistics research . Similar lengthy references dealing with pertinent aspects include [8, 9]. In contrast, the

  8. Extended Basis Set Calculations of Atomization Energies: Comparison of Isogyric and Direct Results.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-09-01

    CF . Adams and .J. Page, "Structures an Energies for Small Boron Co pounds . One and Two Boron Compounds," BRI, Technical Repor in press. 8. R. Kirsh...5000 L. Harris Dover, NJ 07801 2 Cnmnander Naval Surface Weapons Center 2 Commander ATTN: R. Bernecker, R-13 US Army Missile Command G.B. Wilmot , R

  9. Industry Study, Weapons Industry, Spring 2009

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-01-01

    military spending shortfalls. Mr. David Chipman, Dept. of Navy Ms. Cheryl Coto, Dept. of Homeland Security COL Kenneth Deal, U.S. Army Ms. Angela...Agency Supporting Mission Success Briefing, September 10, 2008. 31 Claudia Scottie Knott , Defense Logistics Agency Executive Director of Acquisition...Capture of Insurgent High-Value Target.” PowerPoint Briefing presented at ICAF, March 31, 2009. Knott , Claudia S. Defense Logistics Agency

  10. The Dilemma of Porous Borders: Uganda’s Experience in Combating Terrorism

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-01-10

    34 c. The Anti- money Laundering Act, 2013 ............................36 d. Anti-terrorism Amendment Bill, 2015...ALIR Liberation Army of Rwanda AMISOM African Mission to Somalia AMLA Anti- Money Laundering Act AU Africa Union AUPSC African Union Peace Security...of transnational crimes, including proliferation of weapons, money laundering , corruption and drug trafficking, all of which have reinforced the

  11. Full scale remediation of an explosives-contaminated site at Yorktown Naval Weapons Station using the SABRE{trademark} process

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kaake, R.H.; Bono, J.; Yergovich, T.

    Characterization of a former weapons loading and assembly facility identified soil contaminated with the explosives TNT (2,4,6-trinitrotoluene) and RDX (hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine). The site contains of a variety of discrete soil types that include clay, sand, and humus. A portion of the site is also periodically submerged due to tidal action. Treatability studies were performed in conjunction with the Army Corps of Engineers Waterways Experiment Station. Studies indicated the SABRE Process could successfully treat the soil to the specified treatment goals. A full scale demonstration of the Simplot Anaerobic Biological Remediation (SABRE{trademark}) Process was carried out at the Yorktown, Virginia Naval Weaponsmore » Station. Over 650 yd{sup 3} of soil was treated to less than 2.5 mg/kg TNT in approximately 30 days. Initial concentrations were estimated to be 450 mg/kg. The soil was screened and placed into an in-ground, double-lined biocell using a soil fluidizing system.« less

  12. Poison gas and thefirst World War: key role ofpharmacists.

    PubMed

    Bonnemain, Bruno

    2016-06-01

    Poison gas has been the subject of attention from the French army (Grand Quartier General). The 22sd of April 1915, General Joffre decided that the General Direction for Health Service was in charge of the protection of troops against what he called "this new mode of terror, disease, and death". Actions are been launched to found ways for the protection means and to obtain for the army at least equivalent weapons. Pharmacists will have a leading role thanks to their knowledge in chemistry. Research laboratories were working in two areas: individual protection and production of aggressive agents. Paul Lebeau, Gabriel Bertrand, Alexandre Degrez, Charles Moureu were among many others very committed to fight and remains at the top and to react quickly to ennemy's attacks. At the end of the war, Paul Lebeau received the Legion d'Honneur medal for his contribution to war. The school of pharmacy was recognized as faculty of pharmacy, by a decree of May 14th, 1920. The knowledge that were obtained during this period will be used for the second World War, but the chemical weapon was not much used, as opposed to more recent usage in Vietnam, Irak and Syria.

  13. Predicting U.S. Army suicides after hospitalizations with psychiatric diagnoses in the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS)

    PubMed Central

    Kessler, Ronald C.; Warner, LTC Christopher H.; Ivany, LTC Christopher; Petukhova, Maria V.; Rose, Sherri; Bromet, Evelyn J.; Brown, LTC Millard; Cai, Tianxi; Colpe, Lisa J.; Cox, Kenneth L.; Fullerton, Carol S.; Gilman, Stephen E.; Gruber, Michael J.; Heeringa, Steven G.; Lewandowski-Romps, Lisa; Li, Junlong; Millikan-Bell, Amy M.; Naifeh, James A.; Nock, Matthew K.; Rosellini, Anthony J.; Sampson, Nancy A.; Schoenbaum, Michael; Stein, Murray B.; Wessely, Simon; Zaslavsky, Alan M.; Ursano, Robert J.

    2014-01-01

    IMPORTANCE The U.S. Army experienced a sharp rise in suicides beginning in 2004. Administrative data show that among those at highest risk are soldiers in the 12 months after inpatient treatment of a psychiatric disorder. OBJECTIVE To develop an actuarial risk algorithm predicting suicide in the 12 months after US Army soldier inpatient treatment of a psychiatric disorder to target expanded post-hospital care. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS There were 53,769 hospitalizations of active duty soldiers in 2004–2009 with ICD-9-CM psychiatric admission diagnoses. Administrative data available prior to hospital discharge abstracted from a wide range of data systems (socio81 demographic, Army career, criminal justice, medical/pharmacy) were used to predict suicides in the subsequent 12 months using machine learning methods (regression trees, penalized regressions) designed to evaluate cross-validated linear, nonlinear, and interactive predictive associations. MAIN OUTCOME Suicides of soldiers hospitalized with psychiatric disorders in the 12 months after hospital discharge. RESULTS 68 soldiers died by suicide within 12 months of hospital discharge (12.0% of all Army suicides), equivalent to 263.9 suicides/100,000 person-years compared to 18.5 suicides/100,000 person-years in the total Army. Strongest predictors included socio-demographics (male, late age of enlistment), criminal offenses (verbal violence, weapons possession), prior suicidality, aspects of prior psychiatric inpatient and outpatient treatment, and disorders diagnosed during the focal hospitalizations. 52.9% of post-hospital suicides occurred after the 5% of hospitalizations with highest predicted suicide risk (3,824.1 suicides/100,000 person years). These highest-risk hospitalizations also accounted for significantly elevated proportions of several other adverse post-hospital outcomes (unintentional injury deaths, suicide attempts, re-hospitalizations). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The high concentration of risk of suicides and other adverse outcomes might justify targeting expanded post-hospital interventions to soldiers classified as having highest post-hospital suicide risk, although final determination requires careful consideration of intervention costs, comparative effectiveness, and possible adverse effects. PMID:25390793

  14. Department of the Army Justification of Estimates for Fiscal Year 1984 Submitted to Congress January 1983. Procurement Programs, Aircraft, Missiles, Weapons & Tracked Combat Vehicles, Ammunition and Other National Guard Equipment. Part 3.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-01-01

    Massachusetts Avenue ASA(RDI&A) (21672) 1 APA only Washington, DC 20314 ASA(M&RA) (21594) 1 DANA-WSN (3B455) 6 SALL (2C638) 24 MIPA only Comander 2 DACA ...BUL (3A652) 14 DAA-WSW (3D455) 7 US Army Material & Readiness DACA -BUF (33663) 10 PWTCV only Comand DACA -ZIA (23664) 1 DANA-CS (31432) 2 ATTN: DRCSM...mount for Obtigntiost Idwaitflaoan Gada Its2I-20.01 06 procwaaont actions prormodi -- ............ ---- 119112 actual 120 oat. 2664 at. 2061 actual 12663

  15. Participation on official proficiency test of the OPCW: case study of Brazilian Army – IDQBRN

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Silva, T. C.; Ferreira, C. N.; Cardozo, M.; de Paula, R. L.

    2018-03-01

    In recent years, Brazil has been the scene of international events, gaining worldwide repercussion. However, this increases the risk of terrorist attacks using chemical warfare agents. It brings the need to achieve proficiency to do a quick and unequivocal identification of these dangerous compounds. Thinking about it, the Laboratory of Chemical Analyzes (LAQ) of Brazilian Army has participated since the end of 2010 in the interlaboratory tests promoted by the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). In this article, we discuss about the participation of LAQ in the 40th OPCW Proficiency Test, one more step in the way to become a laboratory designated by OPCW and an international reference.

  16. Embedded CLIPS for SDI BM/C3 simulation and analysis

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Gossage, Brett; Nanney, Van

    1990-01-01

    Nichols Research Corporation is developing the BM/C3 Requirements Analysis Tool (BRAT) for the U.S. Army Strategic Defense Command. BRAT uses embedded CLIPS/Ada to model the decision making processes used by the human commander of a defense system. Embedding CLlPS/Ada in BRAT allows the user to explore the role of the human in Command and Control (C2) and the use of expert systems for automated C2. BRAT models assert facts about the current state of the system, the simulated scenario, and threat information into CLIPS/Ada. A user-defined rule set describes the decision criteria for the commander. We have extended CLIPS/Ada with user-defined functions that allow the firing of a rule to invoke a system action such as weapons release or a change in strategy. The use of embedded CLIPS/Ada will provide a powerful modeling tool for our customer at minimal cost.

  17. Force transformation: an historical perspective from across the Atlantic

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Salt, John D.

    2004-07-01

    The twentieth century saw the armies of the US and the UK successfully meet a number of extreme demands imposed by changes in weapons technology and by politico-military events. In many cases, on both sides of the Atlantic, this has demanded a greater or lesser transformation of military organisation and practice. The present paper attempts a broad conspectus of the reactions of both armies to the most significant of these technological challenges, such as the magazine rifle, war gases, the tank, indirect-fire artillery, radio control, the atomic bomb, the guided missile and the digital computer. It seems that the US Army has been much more prepared than the British to re-organise itself to meet technological change. The British Army not only seems to have transformed itself less often, but also as a response to pressures other than those of technology. The author concludes that there are certain principles that have held good throughout a century of sometimes dizzying technological change, and which will be worth holding on to. The force transformation we see may not be entirely the one we expect.

  18. Public Health, Law, and Local Control: Destruction of the US Chemical Weapons Stockpile

    PubMed Central

    Greenberg, Michael R.

    2003-01-01

    Destruction of US chemical weapons has begun at one of the 8 sites in the continental United States, was completed on Johnston Island in the Pacific Ocean, and is scheduled to begin in at least 3 other locations during the upcoming year. About 25% of the stockpile and 38% of the munitions had been destroyed as of December 31, 2002. However, the program has become controversial with regard to choice of technology, emergency management, and cost. This controversy is in large part due to efforts by some state and local governments and activist groups to play a more central role in a decisionmaking process that was once fully controlled by the US Army. PMID:12893599

  19. Department of the Army Justification of Estimates for Fiscal Year 1983. Submitted to Congress February 1982.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-02-01

    6.040 0.90 U 1-98 0 62120A FUZE/NUCLEAR WPNS EFFECTS /FLUIDICS 3 G.763 0.223 8,532 11.363 U [-105 O 62201A AIRCRAFT WEAPONS TE1CHNOLOGY 3 1,060 2.004...HUMAN FACTORS ENOR IN SYS DEV I 7.005 0.547 9.173 11.400 U 1-2)6 27 62717A HMRIAN PERFORMANCE EFFECT .’SIMJULATION I 3.196 3,373 3,581 4.360 U j-241 26...62710A MOBILITY AND WEAPONS EFFECTS TECH I5.251 6,260 6.410 9.402 U -245 29 62720A ENVIRONPOENTAL DUALITY TECH 6,437 7,493 6.706 9,627 u 1-251 30 02722A

  20. A Framework for Facility Modification.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-09-01

    effective , Army training must be performance oriented, demanding and realistic. Effective training with today’s complex weapons and combined arms fighting... PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER(S) S MONITORING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER(S) 6a NAME OF PERFORMING ORGANIZATION 6b. OFFICE SYMBOL 7a. NAME OF...communication is vital to the successful integration of new technologies into existing organizations. 6 0 Timely and effective communication of

  1. Towards Production of Additive Manufacturing Grade Metallic Powders on the Battlefield

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-01

    ARL-RP-0618 ● OCT 2017 US Army Research Laboratory Towards Production of Additive Manufacturing Grade Metallic Powders on the...Research Laboratory Towards Production of Additive Manufacturing Grade Metallic Powders on the Battlefield by Marc Pepi Weapons and...REPORT TYPE Reprint 3. DATES COVERED (From - To) June 2016–June 2017 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Towards Production of Additive Manufacturing Grade

  2. United States Army Medical Department Journal, January-March 2010

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-03-01

    or reclassification. Soldiers at a minimum must be able to perform the following common tasks: fire individual weapon ; wear the ballistic helmet...the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (1996). The President’s Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and...Committee on Human Radiation Experiments resulted in Executive Order 12975,𔃽 which established the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC) in

  3. Acoustic Nondestructive Evaluation of Aircraft Paneling Using Piezoelectric Sensors

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-12-01

    Electromagnetic Materials Team of the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, Clinical Trials Monitoring Branch, for...connected to this clip. This electrical connection ensures single-point grounding, which has been implemented to avoid electromagnetic interference...waveform of each sensor features an electromagnetic pick-up signature that is aligned with the transduced signal but phase shifted by 180. We know to

  4. Radio Frequency Ranging for Swarm Relative Localization

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-01

    The findings in this report are not to be construed as an official Department of the Army position unless so designated by other authorized documents...information. This is particularly important in GPS-denied environments where there are limited positioning options. Many applications exist for relative...positioning, such as collision avoidance, formation flying, and patterned weapon delivery. Although there are many technologies that can be employed for

  5. Gas Metal Arc Weld (GMAW) Qualification of 7020-T651 Aluminum

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-11-01

    ARL-TR-7515 ● NOV 2015 US Army Research Laboratory Gas Metal Arc Weld (GMAW) Qualification of 7020-T651 Aluminum by John F...Metal Arc Weld (GMAW) Qualification of 7020-T651 Aluminum by John F Chinella Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, ARL Nick Kapustka and...Seth Shira Edison Welding Institute, Columbus, Ohio Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. ii REPORT

  6. The Ukrainian Crisis and European Security: Implications for the United States and U.S. Army

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-01-01

    Finland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 New Uncertainties in the Black Sea Region...increas- ing pressure if Putin is successful in destabilizing eastern Ukraine. Putin’s Increasing Commitment to the Pro -Russian Separatists Since the...downing of the MH17 commercial airliner in July 2014, Russia has increased weapon deliveries to the pro -Russian rebels, as well as the firepower of

  7. Recent Religious Accommodations: Have We Gone Too Far Too Fast?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-03-12

    de corps, eventually colorful fighting uniforms gave way to drab colors as weapons improved in precision and camouflaging with the environment...and the Army provides gear for soldiers use. In garrisons, soldiers wear their uniforms unless the commander allows for the wear of civilian clothes ...provides an appeal process .39 Commanders, often in conjunction with their command or post chaplain, routinely address requests for religious

  8. Next generation cooled long range thermal sights with minimum size, weight, and power

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Breiter, R.; Ihle, T.; Wendler, J.; Rühlich, I.; Ziegler, J.

    2013-06-01

    Situational awareness and precise targeting at day, night and severe weather conditions are key elements for mission success in asymmetric warfare. To support these capabilities for the dismounted soldier, AIM has developed a family of stand-alone thermal weapon sights based on high performance cooled IR-modules which are used e.g. in the infantryman of the future program of the German army (IdZ). The design driver for these sights is a long ID range <1500m for the NATO standard target to cover the operational range of a platoon with the engagement range of .50 cal rifles, 40mm AGLs or for reconnaissance tasks. The most recent sight WBZG has just entered into serial production for the IdZ enhanced system of the German army with additional capabilities like a wireless data link to the soldier backbone computer. Minimum size, weight and power (SWaP) are most critical requirements for the dismounted soldiers' equipment and sometimes push a decision towards uncooled equipment with marginal performance referring to the outstanding challenges in current asymmetric warfare, e.g. the capability to distinguish between combatants and non-combatants in adequate ranges. To provide the uncompromised e/o performance with SWaP parameters close to uncooled, AIM has developed a new thermal weapon sight based on high operating temperature (HOT) MCT MWIR FPAs together with a new low power single piston stirling cooler. In basic operation the sight is used as a clip-on in front of the rifle scope. An additional eyepiece for stand-alone targeting with e.g. AGLs or a biocular version for relaxed surveillance will be available. The paper will present details of the technologies applied for such long range cooled sights with size, weight and power close to uncooled.

  9. [The experiments conducted by Japanese on human guinea pigs, and the use of biological weapons during the Sino-Japanese war (1937-1945)].

    PubMed

    Sabbatani, Sergio

    2014-09-01

    Starting from the end of the nineteenth century, and during the first four decades of the past century, Japan showed considerable military expansion, on the back of a pan-Asiatic and imperialistic ideology, comparable only to those expressed by Wilhelmian and Nazi Germany. This growth led to Japan playing an extremely important role in the Asia-Pacific continent, which unavoidably brought the country onto a collision course with the British Empire and the United States of America. The Japanese general Shiro Ishii, who had undoubted organisational abilities but also a propensity for crimes against mankind, starting from the end of the 1920s and during the subsequent decade, under the suggestion of a military physician, developed a research programme to obtain biological weapons, since he was aware of the lack of raw materials, technology and scientific background in nuclear weapons. This project was taken forward despite Japan's ratification of the Geneva protocol, undersigned by 70 nations, which posed strict limits to the use of both biological and chemical weapons. In actual fact, the protocol allowed these weapons for defensive purposes, and permitted their experimental development. The research programme, developed with the support of the high command of the Japanese army and certainly known by the Emperor (Tenno) Hirohito, had its operative basis from the year 1932 in the satellite state of Manchukuo, but later and paralleling the increased, aggressive behaviour towards China and the English and American colonies during World War II, spread towards other Asian provinces occupied by the Japanese armies, with other operative units. In these dedicated bases, which were true concentration camps, numerous experiments were carried out on human guinea pigs, frequently concluding with vivisection. Among others, experiments of freezing, thirst, hunger, loss of blood, wounding with firearms, and bone fractures, were performed, as well as the inoculation of microorganisms (including Yersinia pestis, Vibrio cholerae, Richettsia typhi, and Salmonella typhi), and spores of Bacillus anthracis. With regard to infectious diseases, the objective was to establish the most effective models for the use of biological weapons, taking into consideration the features of territories and populations to be placed under attack. It has been estimated that over 100,000 people suffered in such experiments, and according to the authors who studied these facts on the basis of original documentation, approximately 540,000 subjects lost their lives in China and Korea due to epidemics caused by the Japanese between 1937 and 1945.

  10. Numerical Simulation of Chemical Weapon Detonations

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1996-08-01

    Engineers , is currently involved in the location, removal, and demilitarization of stockpiled and non-stockpiled chemical munitions. To support the...U.S. Army Corps of Engineers , is currently involved in the location, removal, and demilitarization of stockpiled and non-stockpiled chemical munitions...Length 6" As part of the development of a chemical agent confinement structure for use by the Huntsville Corps of Engineers , SwRI performed arena tests on

  11. Army Synthetic Validity Project Report of Phase 2 Results. Volume 3. Research Instruments

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-10-01

    Areas 7. The type of secondary arms room lock shown at A in the diagram below requires rotation A. monthly B. quarterly C. semiannually D. annually E...building concrete, stone, or other structures (for example, roads, fortifications , buildings, etc.). 16. Operate wheeled vehicles - drive wheeled...for cover and concealment and to place weapons, fortifications , mines, and detectors. 64. Translate foreign languages - translate written or spoken

  12. JPRS Report, Arms Control.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-01-14

    people in the group, with the exception of N . S . Petrushenko, have nothing to do with either the army or nuclear physics. [Soshnikov] But since you can...Weapon [A. Malikov; Moscow Radio 27 Dec] 18 Nuclear Modernization in Britain Examined [ S . Sayenko; Moscow International 28 Dec] 19... N . I. Ryzhkov. Scientists and testers wrote him at their own initiative. There was no answer. Last November, because of the whipping up of the

  13. Quasi-Steady Simulations for the Efficient Generation of Static Aerodynamic Coefficients at Subsonic Velocity

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-09-01

    ARL-TR-7790 ● SEP 2016 US Army Research Laboratory Quasi -Steady Simulations for the Efficient Generation of Static Aerodynamic... Quasi -Steady Simulations for the Efficient Generation of Static Aerodynamic Coefficients at Subsonic Velocity by Sidra I Silton Weapons and...To) December 2014–April 2015 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Quasi -Steady Simulations for the Efficient Generation of Static Aerodynamic Coefficients at

  14. The Automation of the Transonic Experimental Facility (TEF) and the Aerodynamic Experimental Facility (AEF)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-10-01

    ARL-TR-7506 ● OCT 2015 US Army Research Laboratory The Automation of the Transonic Experimental Facility (TEF) and the...Laboratory The Automation of the Transonic Experimental Facility (TEF) and the Aerodynamic Experimental Facility (AEF) by Charith R Ranawake Weapons...To) 05/2015–08/2015 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE The Automation of the Transonic Experimental Facility (TEF) and the Aerodynamic Experimental Facility

  15. Generating Variable Wind Profiles and Modeling Their Effects on Small-Arms Trajectories

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-04-01

    ARL-TR-7642 ● APR 2016 US Army Research Laboratory Generating Variable Wind Profiles and Modeling Their Effects on Small-Arms... Wind Profiles and Modeling Their Effects on Small-Arms Trajectories by Timothy A Fargus Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, ARL...Generating Variable Wind Profiles and Modeling Their Effects on Small-Arms Trajectories 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM

  16. Predicting the Mobility and Burial of Underwater Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) Using the UXO Mobility Model (ESTCP) 200417

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-11-01

    Abbreviations and Acronyms Acronym Definition ADCP Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler AGD Applications Guidance Document ARAMS Army Risk Assessment Modeling...Center iv NESDI Navy Environmental Sustainability Development to Integration NOS National Ocean Service NS Naval Station NWS Naval Weapons...Plan QAS Quality Assurance Specialist RAC Risk Assessment Code REF/DIF Refraction/Diffraction ROI Return on Investment SAJ Dr. Scott A. Jenkins

  17. Experimental Flight Characterization of Spin Stabilized Projectiles at High Angle of Attack

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-08-07

    ARL-TR-8082 ● AUG 2017 US Army Research Laboratory Experimental Flight Characterization of Spin- Stabilized Projectiles at High ...Experimental Flight Characterization of Spin- Stabilized Projectiles at High Angle of Attack by Frank Fresconi and Ilmars Celmins Weapons and Materials...June 2016–June 2017 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Experimental Flight Characterization of Spin-Stabilized Projectiles at High Angle of Attack 5a. CONTRACT

  18. Early Rockets

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1940-01-01

    This drawing illustrates the vital dimensions of the A-4 (Aggregate-4). Later renamed the V-2 (Vengeance Weapon-2), the rocket was developed by Dr. Wernher von Braun and the German rocket team at Peenemuende, Germany on the Baltic Sea. At the end of World War II, the team of German engineers and scientists came to the United States and continued rocket research for the Army at Fort Bliss, Texas, and Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama.

  19. Early Rockets

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1940-01-01

    The cutaway drawing of the A-4 (Aggregate-4) rocket. Later renamed the V-2 (Vengeance Weapon-2), The rocket was developed by Dr. Wernher von Braun and the German rocket team at Peenemuende, Germany on the Baltic Sea. At the end of World War II, the team of German engineers and scientists came to the United States and continued rocket research for the Army at Fort Bliss, Texas, and Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama.

  20. Non-Strategic Nuclear Targeting in a Non-Nuclear Army

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1994-06-03

    their needs. After all, the nucler planners and target analysts at corps level must surely consider their preparedness an important issue. Also...controlled escalation (the nuclear signal) and its ability to apply nuclear power in a decisive manner. A hedge against the emergence of an overwhelming...manuals envision NSNF as powerful yet flexible alternatives to the more destabilizing strategic nuclear weapons. NSNF could be used as a show of

  1. JPRS Report, Arms Control

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-05-09

    light of the fact that the use of nuclear weapons has already been attempted three times in Korea. The Japanese magazine ASAHI JOURNAL on 6 August...Korea struck back. (Japanese magazine ASAHI JOURNAL, 6 August 1982) JPRS-TAC-89-019 9 May 1989 EAST ASIA Seeking to inflict nuclear holocaust...Japanese magazine GENDAI, July 1984) In this connection, former U.S. Army Chief of General Staff Meyer said that the issue of using nuclear

  2. Strategy-Policy Mismatch: How the U.S. Army Can Help Close Gaps in Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-01-01

    Niblack, and Dana J. Johnson, A League of Airmen: U.S. Air Power in the Gulf War, Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND Corporation, MR-343-AF, 1994. 8 Lolita C...Sanger, and Anne Barnard, “Off-the-Cuff Obama Line Put U.S. in Bind on Syria,” New York Times, May 4, 2013. Baldor, Lolita C., “U.S. Troops Could

  3. U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL) multimodal signatures database

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bennett, Kelly

    2008-04-01

    The U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL) Multimodal Signatures Database (MMSDB) is a centralized collection of sensor data of various modalities that are co-located and co-registered. The signatures include ground and air vehicles, personnel, mortar, artillery, small arms gunfire from potential sniper weapons, explosives, and many other high value targets. This data is made available to Department of Defense (DoD) and DoD contractors, Intel agencies, other government agencies (OGA), and academia for use in developing target detection, tracking, and classification algorithms and systems to protect our Soldiers. A platform independent Web interface disseminates the signatures to researchers and engineers within the scientific community. Hierarchical Data Format 5 (HDF5) signature models provide an excellent solution for the sharing of complex multimodal signature data for algorithmic development and database requirements. Many open source tools for viewing and plotting HDF5 signatures are available over the Web. Seamless integration of HDF5 signatures is possible in both proprietary computational environments, such as MATLAB, and Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) computational environments, such as Octave and Python, for performing signal processing, analysis, and algorithm development. Future developments include extending the Web interface into a portal system for accessing ARL algorithms and signatures, High Performance Computing (HPC) resources, and integrating existing database and signature architectures into sensor networking environments.

  4. 48 CFR 217.173 - Multiyear contracts for weapon systems.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... weapon systems. 217.173 Section 217.173 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE ACQUISITION... Mulityear Contracting 217.173 Multiyear contracts for weapon systems. As authorized by 10 U.S.C. 2306b(h... contract for— (a) A weapon system and associated items, services, and logistics support for a weapon system...

  5. Mortality in US Army Gulf War Veterans Exposed to 1991 Khamisiyah Chemical Munitions Destruction

    PubMed Central

    Bullman, Tim A.; Mahan, Clare M.; Kang, Han K.; Page, William F.

    2005-01-01

    Objectives. We investigated whether US Army Gulf War veterans who were potentially exposed to nerve agents during the March 1991 weapons demolitions at Khamisiyah, Iraq, are at increased risk of cause-specific mortality. Methods. The cause-specific mortality of 100487 exposed US Army Gulf War veterans was compared with that of 224980 unexposed US Army Gulf War veterans. Exposure was determined with the Department of Defense 2000 plume model. Relative risk estimates were derived from Cox proportional hazards models. Results. The risks of most disease-related mortality were similar for exposed and unexposed veterans. However, exposed veterans had an increased risk of brain cancer deaths (relative risk [RR]=1.94; 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.12, 3.34). The risk of brain cancer death was larger among those exposed 2 or more days than those exposed 1 day when both were compared separately to all unexposed veterans (RR=3.26; 95% CI=1.33, 7.96; RR=1.72; 95% CI=0.95,3.10, respectively). Conclusions. Exposure to chemical munitions at Khamisiyah may be associated with an increased risk of brain cancer death. Additional research is required to confirm this finding. PMID:16043669

  6. Mortality in US Army Gulf War veterans exposed to 1991 Khamisiyah chemical munitions destruction.

    PubMed

    Bullman, Tim A; Mahan, Clare M; Kang, Han K; Page, William F

    2005-08-01

    We investigated whether US Army Gulf War veterans who were potentially exposed to nerve agents during the March 1991 weapons demolitions at Khamisiyah, Iraq, are at increased risk of cause-specific mortality. The cause-specific mortality of 100487 exposed US Army Gulf War veterans was compared with that of 224980 unexposed US Army Gulf War veterans. Exposure was determined with the Department of Defense 2000 plume model. Relative risk estimates were derived from Cox proportional hazards models. The risks of most disease-related mortality were similar for exposed and unexposed veterans. However, exposed veterans had an increased risk of brain cancer deaths (relative risk [RR]=1.94; 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.12, 3.34). The risk of brain cancer death was larger among those exposed 2 or more days than those exposed 1 day when both were compared separately to all unexposed veterans (RR=3.26; 95% CI=1.33, 7.96; RR=1.72; 95% CI=0.95,3.10, respectively). Exposure to chemical munitions at Khamisiyah may be associated with an increased risk of brain cancer death. Additional research is required to confirm this finding.

  7. Australian DefenceScience. Volume 15, Number 2, Winter

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-01-01

    sources, including the original builders, Vickers Shipyards, the Royal Australian Navy Archives, the Australian National Archives, the British...South Australia. The trial team also included personnel from the Army 3rd/9th Light Horse as well the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology and Vision...the Austeyr and AK47 weapons. The two torsos presented for testing were made of a 20% strength solution of gelatine jelly , which, at a temperature of

  8. A Heuristic Route Selection Model for Low Level Aircraft Flight Through Defended Terrain.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-05-01

    IICEN(I9J),vJ= 1q3 )vI~lvhl-I) WRITE(7,902) (DETLCU ).I11NLOW) WRITE (79902) (CETHI (I) ,I=1 Nt1I) WRITE(79901) (FROM(I),I1, 9IC) WRITE(79901) ((TOC IJ) ,J...the Army ATTN: DAMO-RQ, LTC G. Ax 1 Washington, DC 20310 Joint Services Electro Optical Guidance Weapons Countermeasures Test Program ATTN: DRXDE- TD 1

  9. Nuclear Weapons Effects Mitigation Techniques

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-06-01

    ELF ) into the ultra-high (UHF) frequeniese, with much of Its energy concentrated In frequenrv ranges (high frequency (IF) into UHF) employed by Army...tactical Communications equipment. It Is of concern because the damage and upset it causes can occur Rt distances from the burst far beyond where...radiation is scattered from all directions, most of’ it comes from direct line-of-sight to the fireball. Therefore, the flat earth cover of an underground

  10. Using Ferromagnetic Material to Extend and Shield the Magnetic Field of a Coil

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-06-14

    ARL-MR-0954 ● Jun 2017 US Army Research Laboratory Using Ferromagnetic Material to Extend and Shield the Magnetic Field of a...to Extend and Shield the Magnetic Field of a Coil by W Casey Uhlig Weapons and Materials Research Directorate, ARL...Using Ferromagnetic Material to Extend and Shield the Magnetic Field of a Coil 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER

  11. Army Attack Helicopters: Can They Survive on the Airland Battlefield?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-06-05

    include details of air action given by ground observors on both sides, but contains a great dcal of minutia . A thorough 13 reading will give one all...volunteered ..... and they were firmly fastened on the lateral stretchers, their automatic weapons pointing forward. Twenty minutes later, astonished...detonation point area. The implications for lessor degrees of warfighting were readily apparent and would be soon self evident. By this time, combat units

  12. Close Air Support and Interdiction Missions as Seen by the Air Force and Army

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1997-06-01

    vehicle. Artillery Artillery is the surface weapon that typically causes the greatest destruction on the battlefield. Statistics from World War II show... Coursebook (USAF Air Command and Staff College, 1996), 628. 51. Dunnigan, 458. 52. Stephen Hosmer, Psychological Effects Of U.S. Air Operations In Four...Strategic Structures AY 96. Coursebook , vol. II. Maxwell Air Force Base, AL: 1995. Air War—Vietnam. New York, Arno Press, 1978. Atkinson, Rick

  13. Digital Logistics

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2000-03-17

    There will also be instances when we will need to take advantage of technological leaps made by our allies. The ’clash’ of high tech with low tech ...must be considered, especially as we move toward very high tech solutions to our military needs. The end goal is to create Army Forces that are...effect that science and technology today distort the military by substituting high - tech weapons that do not always work for more basic military

  14. What Kept the Tank from Being the Decisive Weapon of World War One?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-12-14

    Mechanization in the British Army (London: Sifton, Praed and Co ., Ltd ., 1935), 6. 34Stern, 80. 35Childs, 132. 36Williams-Ellis, 52. 37Martel, 58...1916 (London: Macmillan and Co ., Ltd , 1938), 39-40. 2Firstworldwar.com. Battles: The Battle of Flers-Courcelette, 1916, 11 August 2001, http...Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium, 1916. London: Macmillan and Co ., Ltd ., 1938. Murray, Williamson. Armored Warfare: The British

  15. The 31 Initiatives: A Study in Air Force - Army Cooperation

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-01-01

    Monroe, which supplied many docnments from the Papers of General Wiliiam DePuy and other files concerning the TAC- TRADOC Dialogue. MSgt. Roger Jernigan...Charles A. Gabriel and John T. Chain, Jr., who took time from their busy schedules to read and comment on the manuscript. v I viii i...fighting issues affecting both services. The expense of new weapons provided additional incentive 1 THE 31 INITIATIVES for the services to avoid duplication

  16. Responding to Terror: A Report on the U.S. Army War College Consequence Management Symposium

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2002-05-01

    the combination of unconventional weapons proliferation, with the persistence of international terrorism, will end the relative invulnerability of...because it can easily evoke “ the black helicopter syndrome ” in the great state of Kansas. Whatever the case, 144 the main proponents for the initiative are...boundless. The father of the service member killed in the Middle East, or the mother of a child blown up in

  17. The United States Army Concept Capability Plan for Combating Weapons of Mass Destruction for the Futer Modular Force 2015-2024

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-03-25

    development and pest control, also have deleterious dual use potential. By replicating themselves after introduction into a target population, a small...N national NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization NEBC network-enabled battle command NMSCWMD National Military Strategy for Combating...within the continental U.S., Alaska, Hawaii, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa

  18. Broadening Army Leaders for the Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and Ambiguous Environment

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-02-01

    5e. TASK NUMBER 5f. WORK UNIT NUMBER 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) AND ADDRESS(ES) 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION ...past, violent extremist organizations (VEO) are actively seeking the ability to use disease as a weapon to attack the West. The fourth condition of...slides as a primary form of communication sets it apart from most other organizations . Saluting followed by a unit greeting when one soldier meets a

  19. The Impact of Emotional Arousal on Learning in Virtual Environments

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2002-09-01

    intelligence (AI) algorithms, weapon fire/hit/miss rate, health of the players , etc.) within the actual code of the game/VE. No other game offered...experiment was conducted to observe learning differences in a low-arousal condition and a high-arousal condition. A first-person shooter videogame ...and a high-arousal condition. A first-person shooter videogame (America’s Army: Operations) was used as the virtual environment. In the low

  20. Financial Instability: Suicide’s Weapon of Choice

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-03-01

    between indebtedness and suicide raises the question, how can the U.S. Army, within the next three years, improve the financial resiliency of Soldiers...averaging over 1,000 families served per year.45 In Kentucky, the Armed Services YMCA located on Fort Campbell, provided food, clothing , and assistance to... Apparel & Services $86 $162 $209 $244 Personal Care Products & Svcs. $32 $55 $63 $67 Miscellaneous $116 $209 $251 $300 Total $ 565 $1,029 $1,227

  1. [Biological weapons--an old menace in new circumstances].

    PubMed

    Bartůnĕk, P

    2001-12-06

    Biological weapons were conceived for years by the world community only as a potential evil. A fundamental change of opinions regarding their real menace occurred only after the premeditated criminal attack on the USA on September 11, 2001. It was logical that publicists for mall types of media demanded from representatives of the state administration of the Czech Republic information how out country is prepared for this type of danger. Their reactions were hesitant and in a way reflect a certain chaos associated with the reorganization of the army and at the same time unpreparedness of civil defence. To a certain extent all this can be conceived as the consequence of the fundamental transformation of our society and thus it may be excused to a certain extent. Nevertheless it is obvious that not even the most advanced countries are quite clear as regards defence against the horror of biological weapons. Evidence to this effect is the following document, devoted to the problem in the USA, major parts of which we reproduce from the prestigious periodical The England Journal of Medicine.

  2. Terahertz standoff imaging testbed design and performance for concealed weapon and device identification model development

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Franck, Charmaine C.; Lee, Dave; Espinola, Richard L.; Murrill, Steven R.; Jacobs, Eddie L.; Griffin, Steve T.; Petkie, Douglas T.; Reynolds, Joe

    2007-04-01

    This paper describes the design and performance of the U.S. Army RDECOM CERDEC Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate's (NVESD), active 0.640-THz imaging testbed, developed in support of the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency's (DARPA) Terahertz Imaging Focal-Plane Technology (TIFT) program. The laboratory measurements and standoff images were acquired during the development of a NVESD and Army Research Laboratory terahertz imaging performance model. The imaging testbed is based on a 12-inch-diameter Off-Axis Elliptical (OAE) mirror designed with one focal length at 1 m and the other at 10 m. This paper will describe the design considerations of the OAE-mirror, dual-capability, active imaging testbed, as well as measurement/imaging results used to further develop the model.

  3. The expected results method for data verification

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Monday, Paul

    2016-05-01

    The credibility of United States Army analytical experiments using distributed simulation depends on the quality of the simulation, the pedigree of the input data, and the appropriateness of the simulation system to the problem. The second of these factors is best met by using classified performance data from the Army Materiel Systems Analysis Activity (AMSAA) for essential battlefield behaviors, like sensors, weapon fire, and damage assessment. Until recently, using classified data has been a time-consuming and expensive endeavor: it requires significant technical expertise to load, and it is difficult to verify that it works correctly. Fortunately, new capabilities, tools, and processes are available that greatly reduce these costs. This paper will discuss these developments, a new method to verify that all of the components are configured and operate properly, and the application to recent Army Capabilities Integration Center (ARCIC) experiments. Recent developments have focused improving the process to load the data. OneSAF has redesigned their input data file formats and structures so that they correspond exactly with the Standard File Format (SFF) defined by AMSAA, ARCIC developed a library of supporting configurations that correlate directly to the AMSAA nomenclature, and the Entity Validation Tool was designed to quickly execute the essential models with a test-jig approach to identify problems with the loaded data. The missing part of the process is provided by the new Expected Results Method. Instead of the usual subjective assessment of quality, e.g., "It looks about right to me", this new approach compares the performance of a combat model with authoritative expectations to quickly verify that the model, data, and simulation are all working correctly. Integrated together, these developments now make it possible to use AMSAA classified performance data with minimal time and maximum assurance that the experiment's analytical results will be of the highest quality possible.

  4. Modern toxic antipersonnel projectiles.

    PubMed

    Gaillard, Yvan; Regenstreif, Philippe; Fanton, Laurent

    2014-12-01

    In the spring of 1944, Kurt von Gottberg, the SS police chief in Minsk, was shot and injured by 2 Soviet agents. Although he was only slightly injured, he died 6 hours later. The bullets were hollow and contained a crystalline white powder. They were 4-g bullets, semi-jacketed in cupronickel, containing 28 mg of aconitine. They were later known as akonitinnitratgeschosse. The Sipo (the Nazi security police) then ordered a trial with a 9-mm Parabellum cartridge containing Ditran, an anticholinergic drug with hallucinogenic properties causing intense mental confusion. In later years, QNB was used and given the NATO code BZ (3-quinuclidinyl-benzylate). It was proven that Saddam Hussein had this weapon (agent 15) manufactured and used it against the Kurds. Serbian forces used the same type of weapon in the Bosnian conflict, particularly in Srebrenica.The authors go on to list the Cold War toxic weapons developed by the KGB and the Warsaw pact countries for the discreet elimination of dissidents and proindependence leaders who had taken refuge in the West. These weapons include PSZh-13 launchers, the Troika electronic sequential pistol, and the ingenious 4-S110T captive piston system designed by the engineer Stechkin. Disguised as a cigarette case, it could fire a silent charge of potassium cyanide. This rogues gallery also includes the umbrella rigged to inject a pellet of ricin (or another phytalbumin of similar toxicity, such as abrin or crotin) that was used to assassinate the Bulgarian writer and journalist Georgi Markov on September 7, 1978, in London.During the autopsy, the discovery of a bullet burst into 4 or 5 parts has to make at once suspecting the use of a toxic substance. Toxicological analysis has to look for first and foremost aconitine, cyanide, suxamethonium, Ditran, BZ, or one of the toxic phytalbumins. The use of such complex weapons has to make suspect a powerful organization: army, secret service, terrorism. The existence of the Russian UDAR spray gun in the present day, however, shows that these weapons are still present. The possibility that one might be used to spray a charge of cyanide is still very real, especially as it would not be very difficult for an informed amateur to produce homemade toxic ammunition by adapting existing civil or military cartridges.

  5. Developing and Implementing an Effective National Security Strategy for Croatia

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-03-01

    Croatian capital city Zagreb , “if somebody will jeopardize, with arms, Croatian sovereignty, we will defend ourselves with all the weapons we have, and...Social Liberal Party, in his speech on August 30, 1991, in the front of the former 5th Yugoslavia Army Area Command in Zagreb said “we do not have...Serbian aggressor in just 31 hours and established control over the highway Zagreb -Lipovac. Operation Storm liberated large Croatian regions along the

  6. Probability Formulas for Describing Fragment Size Distributions

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-06-01

    L)RCDMD-ST 5001 EisenhowerAvenue Alexandria,VA 22333 Commander US Amy MaterielDevelopment G ReadinessCommand ATTN: DRCDL 5001EisenhowerAvenue...Sieling Natick,MA 01762 CoWander US Amy Tank Automotive DevelopmentCommand ATTN: DRDTA-UL Warren,MI 48090 1 1 1 1 1 Organization Commander US Army...ATTN: D.R. Garrison 3 A. Wilner Bethesda,MD 20084 Commander 1 NavalSurfaceWeaponsCenter ATTN: Code TEB, D. W. Colberts ~n Mr. S. Hock Code TX, Dr. W.G

  7. Considerations for Operations on Urban Terrain by Light Forces

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-01-01

    precaution to make themselves "less detecta.ble* in the city. Some, because of the way in which they draped belts of ammunition over themse es...German Infantry Weapons of world Wa_ !I. London: 4rms and Armour Press, 1969. Bavly. Dan. Fire in Beirut. Briarcliff Manor: Stein and Day Publishers, 1984...Echelon.* Unpublished paper, Fort Leavenworth, 1983. Smith, Field Officer R.G. "The Soviet Armoured threat and NATO Anti- Armour capabilities." The- Army

  8. Deep Battle and Interdiction: Twin Sons of Different Mothers.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1997-02-07

    Westport, CT: Greenwood Press 1993. Vallance , Andrew G.B. The Air Weapon - Doctrines of Air Power Strategy and Operational Art. New York, NY: St...34Employing Airpower in the Twenty-first Century," in The Future of Airpower in the Aftermath of the Gulf ed. Shultz, Richard H. and Pfaltzgraff, Robert L...Simultaneous Attack - One Battle Lab Helping to Forge the Army’s Future" Field Artillery (April 1993) Lewis, Richard . "JFACC Problems Associated with

  9. Defense Logistical Support Contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan: Issues for Congress

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-09-20

    Services Committee on April 14, 2010. The bill was amended by the HASC on April 21, 2010, discharged by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee...Afghanistan; • Section 852 calls for the Army Audit Agency, the Navy Audit Services, and the Air Force Audit Agency to each conduct a comprehensive audit of...security functions in areas of combat operations and are involved in the discharge of a weapon or other active, non-lethal countermeasures; and

  10. Defense Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan: Issues and Options for Congress

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-02-19

    Afghanistan; • Section 852 calls for the Army Audit Agency, the Navy Audit Services, and the Air Force Audit Agency to each conduct a comprehensive audit of...perform security functions in areas of combat operations and are involved in the discharge of a weapon or other active, non-lethal countermeasures; and...strengthen the government’s hand in dealing with industry. As an example, Secretary of the Navy Donald C. Winter and Chief of Naval Operations Adm

  11. Defense Logistical Support Contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan: Issues for Congress

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-06-24

    on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan; • Section 852 calls for the Army Audit Agency, the Navy Audit Services, and the Air Force Audit...reporting requirements for contractors that perform security functions in areas of combat operations and are involved in the discharge of a weapon or other...hand in dealing with industry. As an example, Secretary of the Navy Donald C. Winter and Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Michael G. Mullen have reported

  12. The Trilateral Force: The Atlantic Alliance and the Future of Nuclear Weapons Strategy

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-01-01

    2010), 10. 4 Robert Manning, Envisioning 2030: U.S. Strategy for a Post-Western World, Atlantic Council (2013), 46. 5 Paul Bracken, The Second...Strategic Stability: Contending Interpretations, U.S. Army War College Strategic Studies Institute (2013); Paul Bracken, “The Bomb Returns for a Second...U.S. Nuclear Strategy, Force Structure and Posture, Global Zero (2012), 6. 27 Dana Johnson, et al., “Triad, Dyad, Monad? Shaping the U.S. Force of

  13. The Manhattan Project: An Overview

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Reed, Cameron

    2017-01-01

    August 2017 will mark the 75th anniversary of the establishment of the United States Army's Manhattan Engineer District, which oversaw the development and deployment of the first generation of nuclear weapons during World War II. In this talk I give an overview of the Manhattan Project, touching on its historical context, genesis, organization, facilities, accomplishments, challenges encountered, and legacies. I will also comment briefly on some of its lesser-known aspects and the persistent popular mythologies that still surround it.

  14. Shifting Focus: Assessing the Role of U.S. Army Special Forces in the Counterproliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-06-01

    4 The Japanese cult Aum Shinrikyo desired a capability so much that they purchased a ranch in Western Australia in order to mine uranium and even...Security, eds. James A. Russell and James J. Wirtz (New York: Routledge, 2008), 164. 9 interdict suspected proliferation activities would meet...Proliferation Efforts,” in Globalization and WMD Proliferation: Terrorism, Transnational Networks, and International Security, eds. James A. Russell

  15. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Simulations of a Finned Projectile with Microflaps for Flow Control

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-04-01

    fields associated with these control mechanisms for US Army weapons are complex, involving 3-dimensional (3-D) shock- boundary layer interactions...distribution over the rear finned section and thus produce control forces and moments. Dykes et al.6 used a flat - plate fin interaction design of...cells—tetrahedrals, triangular prisms, and pyramids—were used in the mesh. Grid points shown in Fig. 3a were clustered in the boundary layer region

  16. A Limited Dynamic Investigation of Magnesium Alloy AZ31B in 3 Orientations

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-09-01

    YYYY) September 2016 2. REPORT TYPE Technical Report 3. DATES COVERED (From - To) 1 August 2014–31 December 2015 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE A ...ARL-TR-7807 ● SEP 2016 US Army Research Laboratory A Limited Dynamic Investigation of Magnesium Alloy AZ31B in 3 Orientations...Laboratory A Limited Dynamic Investigation of Magnesium Alloy AZ31B in 3 Orientations by Tyrone L Jones Weapons and Materials Research Directorate

  17. German flooding of the Pontine Marshes in World War II.

    PubMed

    Geissler, Erhard; Guillemin, Jeanne

    2010-03-01

    The German army's 1943 flooding of the Pontine Marshes south of Rome, which later caused a sharp rise in malaria cases among Italian civilians, has recently been described by historian Frank Snowden as a unique instance of biological warfare and bioterrorism in the European theater of war and, consequently, as a violation of the 1925 Geneva Protocol prohibiting chemical and biological warfare. We argue that archival documents fail to support this allegation, on several counts. As a matter of historical record, Hitler prohibited German biological weapons (BW) development and consistently adhered to the Geneva Protocol. Rather than biological warfare against civilians, the Wehrmacht used flooding, land mines, and the destruction of vital infrastructure to obstruct the Allied advance. To protect its own troops in the area, the German army sought to contain the increased mosquito breeding likely to be caused by the flooding. Italians returning to the Pontine Marshes after the German retreat in 1944 suffered malaria as a result of environmental destruction, which was banned by the 1899 and 1907 Hague Conventions and by subsequent treaties. In contrast, a state's violation of the Geneva Protocol, whether past or present, involves the use of germ weapons and, by inference, a state-level capability. Any allegation of such a serious violation demands credible evidence that meets high scientific and legal standards of proof.

  18. Enhanced terahertz imaging system performance analysis and design tool for concealed weapon identification

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Murrill, Steven R.; Franck, Charmaine C.; Espinola, Richard L.; Petkie, Douglas T.; De Lucia, Frank C.; Jacobs, Eddie L.

    2011-11-01

    The U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL) and the U.S. Army Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate (NVESD) have developed a terahertz-band imaging system performance model/tool for detection and identification of concealed weaponry. The details of the MATLAB-based model which accounts for the effects of all critical sensor and display components, and for the effects of atmospheric attenuation, concealment material attenuation, and active illumination, were reported on at the 2005 SPIE Europe Security & Defence Symposium (Brugge). An advanced version of the base model that accounts for both the dramatic impact that target and background orientation can have on target observability as related to specular and Lambertian reflections captured by an active-illumination-based imaging system, and for the impact of target and background thermal emission, was reported on at the 2007 SPIE Defense and Security Symposium (Orlando). This paper will provide a comprehensive review of an enhanced, user-friendly, Windows-executable, terahertz-band imaging system performance analysis and design tool that now includes additional features such as a MODTRAN-based atmospheric attenuation calculator and advanced system architecture configuration inputs that allow for straightforward performance analysis of active or passive systems based on scanning (single- or line-array detector element(s)) or staring (focal-plane-array detector elements) imaging architectures. This newly enhanced THz imaging system design tool is an extension of the advanced THz imaging system performance model that was developed under the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency's (DARPA) Terahertz Imaging Focal-Plane Technology (TIFT) program. This paper will also provide example system component (active-illumination source and detector) trade-study analyses using the new features of this user-friendly THz imaging system performance analysis and design tool.

  19. The development of Army relevant peptide-based surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) sensors for biological threat detection

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Farrell, Mikella E.; Strobbia, Pietro; Sarkes, Deborah A.; Stratis-Cullum, Dimitra N.; Cullum, Brian M.; Pellegrino, Paul M.

    2016-05-01

    The utility of peptide-based molecular sensing for the development of novel biosensors has resulted in a significant increase in their development and usage for sensing targets like chemical, biological, energetic and toxic materials. Using peptides as a molecular recognition element is particularly advantageous because there are several mature peptide synthesis protocols that already exist, peptide structures can be tailored, selected and manipulated to be highly discerning towards desired targets, peptides can be modified to be very stable in a host of environments and stable under many different conditions, and through the development of bifunctionalized peptides can be synthesized to also bind onto desired sensing platforms (various metal materials, glass, etc.). Two examples of the several Army relevant biological targets for peptide-based sensing platforms include Ricin and Abrin. Ricin and Abrin are alarming threats because both can be weaponized and there is no antidote for exposure. Combining the sensitivity of SERS with the selectivity of a bifunctional peptide allows for the emergence of dynamic hazard sensor for Army application.

  20. The unexploded ordnance (UXO) contamination problem and the state of the art of UXO remediation technologies

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Thomsen, K.O.; Richardson, C.B.; Valder, K.M.

    1996-12-31

    Millions of acres of US government property are contaminated with unexploded ordnance (UXO) as a result of weapons system testing and troop training activities conducted over the past century at Department of Defense (DoD) sites. Recent DoD downsizing has resulted in the closing of many military bases, many of which are contaminated with UXO. One unexpected result of DoD`s downsizing is the attention focused on the unique problems associated with UXO remediation at these closed military bases. The U.S. Army Environmental Center (U SAEC) is the lead DoD agency for UXO clearance technology demonstrations, evaluation, and technology transfer. USAEC directedmore » the Naval Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technology Division (NAVEODTECHDIV) to serve as the technical lead for the advanced technology demonstration (ATD) program. In 1994, USAEC and NAVEODTECHDIV created controlled test facilities at the U.S. Army Jefferson Proving Ground in Madison, Indiana, to demonstrate and evaluate commercial UXO clearance systems and technologies. Phase I controlled site demonstrations were conducted during the summer of 1994. These demonstrations were followed by the Phase II controlled site demonstrations at JPG. This paper presents the results of the Phase II controlled site demonstrations. The overall performance of the demonstrators is presented along with the operational characteristics and limitations of the various systems and technologies evaluated. Individual demonstrator performance statistics are evaluated by sensor type and sensor transport method.« less

  1. The Defense Logistics Agency: Providing Logistics Support throughout the Department of Defense

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-10-01

    agencies, as well as its engineer, ordnance, and transportation corps. 6 As the Navy and Army recovered from these losses, the dust seemed to settle, yet... transportation and packaging assis- tance, and surveillance of contractor progress to assure timely delivery of material. To streamline contract management in DOD...Ar Foce ktem Ironsr o Ohr.cloru•e. Aki F-oce Nmw Ciamfe. 1901), 11: and ds eracbd froro Headqueree De .. L ta iercy, Weapon Sys- •mppo f Pr•gwn tohy

  2. Guided Standoff Weapons: A Threat to Expeditionary Air Power

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2006-09-01

    Young, and Majors Ron Grey and Marc Sheie whose thoughts contributed to this work. Finally, thank you to my wife, Mary , and my daughter, Natalie. You...time, make it unflyable and possibly put it beyond repair. Hit an M -1 tank with a sledgehammer and you hurt your hands. Starting the defense at...teams dressed in black civilian robes and riding in Nissan pickup trucks moved against the flanks of columns of armor from the US Army’s 3rd

  3. The Development of a Rapid Train-Up Package and Platoon-Level Scenarios for Armor Training in the Army National Guard

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-11-01

    equipped with T-72 tanks and BMPs. He has extensive indirect fire and electronic warfare assets. No chemicals have been used in the past 48 hours...BMPs. He has an extensive electronic warfare and indirect fire capability. Chemical weapons have not been used in the past 24 hours. Indications are...and Campshure (1989) observed that some battlefield activities are not simulated at all on SIMNET (e.g., dismounting, employing chemical alarms

  4. Medical Department, United States Army. Wound Ballistics for World War II.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1962-01-01

    Georgia Island at Zanana Beach between 2 and 6 July to pro- ceed to a line of departure on the Barike River. After considerable fighting, with heavy...1 mile of the Barike River along the Munda trail. At 1100 hours on 19 July, when the battalion was advancing along this trail, it came under...automatic weapons fire at the Barike River; several men were killed and several wounded. The river was not crossed until 20 July, CASUALTY SURVEY, NEW GEORGIA

  5. Rape as a Weapon of War: Should Sexual Assault Medical Forensic Examiners (SAMFEs) be Added to Female Engagement Teams (FETs) in Africa

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-06-10

    determination or copyright permission has been obtained for the inclusion of pictures, maps, graphics, and any other works incorporated into this...Army willing to be placed on FETs and accomplish this mission. Limitations and Delimitations Limitations and delimitations are existing or self ...the focal point of the thesis and can be self -imposed. A limitation of this study is the researcher is focusing solely on women who have been raped

  6. Defense AT&L (Volume 36, Number 6, November-December 2007)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-12-01

    and personal weapons now being used by the 1st Commando Kandak are modeled after a U.S. Army Ranger Battalion’s organizational equipment, and all...MRAPs,” were loaded onto C-5 Galaxy aircraft Thursday night at Charleston Air Force Base, S.C., to be shipped to Iraq. This latest shipment is part...automated information sys- tems, and services within DoD. A Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle is loaded onto a C-5 Galaxy aircraft Aug. 16 at

  7. The Strategic Balance in Transition: Interpreting Changes in US - USSR Weapons Levels.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-10-31

    application of force is prima facie evidence of failure of rational analysis and patient negotiations. Rather, Pipes contends that the Soviet Union...served on active duty briefly with the Army and then with the Air Force from 1958 to 1971 and is currently a reserve officer with the Air National Guard...Soviet force postures and strategic doctrine? Dennis Ross , currently with the Departmenit of Defense’s Office of’ Net Assessment, contends that: 6 The

  8. Designing the Army’s Future Active Duty Weapons of Mass Destruction Response: Is the Defense Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear and High-Yield Explosives Response Force (DCRF) the Right Force at the Right Time?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-06-14

    ever-evolving contemporary nature of external and internal threats to the safety and security of the American homeland, it becomes increasingly...Major Justin P. Hurt, 146 pages. With the ever-evolving contemporary nature of external and internal threats to the safety and security of the American...HAZMAT Hazardous Materials HRF Homeland Response Force HSPD Homeland Security Presidential Directive JFHQ Joint Force

  9. Living with the Devil: Stability in the 21st Century World With or Without Nuclear Weapons

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-03-01

    author’s opinion - if we are not progressing, we must be falling behind . While an arms race is not desired, a strong and unwavering approach towards...than your congresses: on the day that two army corps can mutually annihilate each other in a second, all civilised nations will surely recoil with...we must thus consider this a driving force behind nuclear proliferation. Therefore, as diplomatic, political and social consequences continue to

  10. Translations on Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, Number 277

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1976-12-23

    17 Nov 76) 17 MEXICO U. S. Demand Fosters Sinaloa Drug Production (EXCELSIOR, l6 Nov 76) 18 American Never Set Foot in Prison (EL DIARIO DE ...NUEVO LAREDO, 28 Oct 76) 20 Weapons, Poppies and Marihuana Fall to Army Campaign (EL SOL DE MEXICO, l6 Nov 76) 21 Charge No Action Taken...Against Drugs (EL DIARIO, 25 Oct 76) 22 Rafael Chavez Baldazo Arrested (EL DIARIO, 1 Nov 76) 23 ’Don Cuco’ Gang Smashed (DIARIO DE NOGALES

  11. 48 CFR 212.270 - Major weapon systems as commercial items.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Major weapon systems as... Requirements for the Acquisition of Commercial Items 212.270 Major weapon systems as commercial items. The DoD policy for acquiring major weapon systems as commercial items is in Subpart 234.70. [71 FR 58538, Oct. 4...

  12. 48 CFR 212.270 - Major weapon systems as commercial items.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Major weapon systems as... Requirements for the Acquisition of Commercial Items 212.270 Major weapon systems as commercial items. The DoD policy for acquiring major weapon systems as commercial items is in Subpart 234.70. [71 FR 58538, Oct. 4...

  13. 48 CFR 212.270 - Major weapon systems as commercial items.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Major weapon systems as... Requirements for the Acquisition of Commercial Items 212.270 Major weapon systems as commercial items. The DoD policy for acquiring major weapon systems as commercial items is in Subpart 234.70. [71 FR 58538, Oct. 4...

  14. 48 CFR 212.270 - Major weapon systems as commercial items.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Major weapon systems as... Requirements for the Acquisition of Commercial Items 212.270 Major weapon systems as commercial items. The DoD policy for acquiring major weapon systems as commercial items is in Subpart 234.70. [71 FR 58538, Oct. 4...

  15. 48 CFR 212.270 - Major weapon systems as commercial items.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false Major weapon systems as... Requirements for the Acquisition of Commercial Items 212.270 Major weapon systems as commercial items. The DoD policy for acquiring major weapon systems as commercial items is in Subpart 234.70. [71 FR 58538, Oct. 4...

  16. A Decision Support System for Evaluating Systems of Undersea Sensors and Weapons

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-12-01

    distribution is unlimited A DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEM FOR EVALUATING SYSTEMS OF UNDERSEA SENSORS AND WEAPONS by Team Mental Focus Cohort 142O...A DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEM FOR EVALUATING SYSTEMS OF UNDERSEA SENSORS AND WEAPONS 5. FUNDING NUMBERS 6. AUTHOR(S) Systems Engineering Cohort...undersea weapons, it requires the supporting tools to evaluate and predict the effectiveness of these system concepts. While current naval minefield

  17. Army Force Planning Cost Handbook (AFPCH)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-11-01

    FY82 procurement costs extracted form the POM Procurement Data Base. The weapon system unit cost definition most nearly describing these prices is...Is’ 11 il 1 ~~~~l OIL ~ JII~II It I IM u 14 1W x A I- 44 I It N IIt a-lIt IIr- a00 ~ a a I . 1 I1,35O @ I1 810R II u ILI i41 Iis LL, It-I - C I Ca...NW 4 m I IV4 AI 3 0 MI ha111 IA177 00 -. 1- 1 -. l 6 A s𔃺 ca $soon~. I _ 44 gKK4 oil ’r Ei I~~ EI I ~ a BH* .0 0 ’ 4 cp. oM I’- F 111 jIr a;I HI amm

  18. Performance calculation and simulation system of high energy laser weapon

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, Pei; Liu, Min; Su, Yu; Zhang, Ke

    2014-12-01

    High energy laser weapons are ready for some of today's most challenging military applications. Based on the analysis of the main tactical/technical index and combating process of high energy laser weapon, a performance calculation and simulation system of high energy laser weapon was established. Firstly, the index decomposition and workflow of high energy laser weapon was proposed. The entire system was composed of six parts, including classical target, platform of laser weapon, detect sensor, tracking and pointing control, laser atmosphere propagation and damage assessment module. Then, the index calculation modules were designed. Finally, anti-missile interception simulation was performed. The system can provide reference and basis for the analysis and evaluation of high energy laser weapon efficiency.

  19. Study on combat effectiveness of air defense missile weapon system based on queuing theory

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhao, Z. Q.; Hao, J. X.; Li, L. J.

    2017-01-01

    Queuing Theory is a method to analyze the combat effectiveness of air defense missile weapon system. The model of service probability based on the queuing theory was constructed, and applied to analyzing the combat effectiveness of "Sidewinder" and "Tor-M1" air defense missile weapon system. Finally aimed at different targets densities, the combat effectiveness of different combat units of two types' defense missile weapon system is calculated. This method can be used to analyze the usefulness of air defense missile weapon system.

  20. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Vogt, B.M.; Sorensen, J.H.

    The CSEPP (Chemical Stockpile Emergency Preparedness Program) was created to improve emergency planning and response capabilities at the eight sites around the country that store chemical weapons. These weapons are scheduled to be destroyed in the near future. In preparation of the Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (DPEIS) for the Chemical Stockpile Disposal Program (CSDP), it was proposed that the Army mitigate accidents through an enhanced community emergency preparedness program at the eight storage sites. In 1986, the Army initiated the development of an Emergency Response Concept Plan (ERCP) for the CSDP, one of 12 technical support studies conducted duringmore » preparation of the Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (FPEIS). The purpose of this document is to provide a fairly comprehensive source book on risk, risk management, risk communication research and recommended risk communication practices. It does not merely summarize each publication in the risk communication literature, but attempts to synthesize them along the lines of a set of organizing principles. Furthermore, it is not intended to duplicate other guidance manuals (such as Covello et al.`s manual on risk comparison). The source book was developed for the CSEPP in support of the training module on risk communications. Although the examples provided are specific to CSEPP, its use goes beyond that of CSEPP as the findings apply to a broad spectrum of risk communication topics. While the emphasis is on communication in emergency preparedness and response specific to the CSEPP, the materials cover other non-emergency communication settings. 329 refs.« less

  1. Results of the Radiological Survey of the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant, Middletown, Iowa

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Murray, M.E.

    2001-07-17

    At the request of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), a team from Oak Ridge National Laboratory conducted an indoor radiological survey of property at the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant (IAAAP), Middletown, Iowa in June 2000. The purpose of the survey was to determine if radioactive residuals resulting from previous Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) activities were present inside selected Line 1 buildings at the IAAAP and conduct sampling in those areas of previous AEC operations that utilized radioactive components at some point during the manufacturing process, in order to evaluate any possible immediate health hazards and to collect sufficient informationmore » to determine the next type of survey. The AEC occupied portions of IAAAP from 1947 to 1975 to assemble nuclear weapons. The surveyed areas were identified through interviews with current and former IAAAP employees who had worked at the plant during AEC's tenure, and from AEC records.« less

  2. Billy M. McCormac (1920-1999)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Walt, Martin

    Billy M. McCormac died on September 13, 1999, at age 79. His many friends and colleagues will remember him for the legendary International Institutes on Space Science and Aeronomy, which he organized between 1965 and 1975.Billy was born and raised in Zanesville, Ohio, and graduated from Ohio State University in 1943 in the midst of World War II. He joined the Army as a 2nd Lieutenant and served in Europe and Korea. As a career officer he was sent to graduate school at the University of Virginia, where he received his Ph.D. in nuclear physics in 1957. He held various scientific positions in the Army until his retirement as a Lieutenant Colonel in 1963. His last military position was Chief of Electromagnetics at the Defense Atomic Support Agency, where he was responsible for experiments measuring the effects of the high-altitude nuclear weapon explosions in the Pacific.

  3. Research on the laser angle deception jamming technology of laser countermeasure

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ma, Shi-wei; Chen, Wen-jian; Gao, Wei; Duan, Yuan-yuan

    2015-10-01

    In recent years , laser guided weapons behave very well at destroying the military goals in the local wars, the single-shot probability, effective range and hitting precision getting better. And the semi-active laser guided weapons are the most widely used laser guided weapons. In order to improve the viability and protect important military goals, it's necessary to study the technology to against the semi-active guided weapons. This paper studies the working principle, the advantages and disadvantages of the semi-active guided weapons at first, and analyze the possibility of laser angle deception jamming system working. Then it analyzes the working principle and process of laser angle deception jamming technology. Finally it designs a half-real simulation system of laser angle deception jamming, which consists of semi-active laser guided weapons simulation system and laser angle deception jamming system. The simulation system demonstrates the working process of the laser angle deception jamming system. This paper provides fundamental base for the research on the countermeasure technology of semi-active laser guided weapons.

  4. Exploiting social media for Army operations: Syrian crisis use case

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kase, Sue E.; Bowman, Elizabeth K.; Al Amin, Tanvir; Abdelzaher, Tarek

    2014-05-01

    Millions of people exchange user-generated information through online social media (SM) services. The prevalence of SM use globally and its growing significance to the evolution of events has attracted the attention of the Army and other agencies charged with protecting national security interests. The information exchanged in SM sites and the networks of people who interact with these online communities can provide value to Army intelligence efforts. SM could facilitate the Military Decision Making Process by providing ongoing assessment of military actions from a local citizen perspective. Despite potential value, there are significant technological barriers to leveraging SM. SM collection and analysis are difficult in the dynamic SM environment and deception is a real concern. This paper introduces a credibility analysis approach and prototype fact-finding technology called the "Apollo Fact-finder" that mitigates the problem of inaccurate or falsified SM data. Apollo groups data into sets (or claims), corroborating specific observations, then iteratively assesses both claim and source credibility resulting in a ranking of claims by likelihood of occurrence. These credibility analysis approaches are discussed in the context of a conflict event, the Syrian civil war, and applied to tweets collected in the aftermath of the Syrian chemical weapons crisis.

  5. The impact of human factors, crashworthiness and optical performance design requirements on helmet-mounted display development from the 1970s to the present

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Harding, Thomas H.; Rash, Clarence E.; McLean, William E.; Martin, John S.

    2015-05-01

    Driven by the operational needs of modern warfare, the helmet-mounted display (HMD) has matured from a revolutionary, but impractical, World War I era idea for an infantry marksman's helmet-mounted weapon delivery system to a sophisticated and ubiquitous display and targeting system that dominates current night warfighting operations. One of the most demanding applications for HMD designs has been in Army rotary-wing aviation, where HMDs offer greater direct access to visual information and increased situational awareness in an operational environment where information availability is critical on a second-to-second basis. However, over the past 40 years of extensive HMD development, a myriad of crashworthiness, optical, and human factors issues have both frustrated and challenged designers. While it may be difficult to attain a full consensus on which are the most important HMD design factors, certainly head-supported weight (HSW), exit pupil size, field-of-view, image resolution and physical eye relief have been among the most critical. A confounding factor has been the interrelationship between the many design issues, such as early attempts to use non-glass optical elements to lower HSW, but at the cost of image quality, and hence, pilot visual performance. This paper traces how the role of the demanding performance requirements placed on HMDs by the U.S. Army aviation community has impacted the progress of HMD designs towards the Holy Grail of HMD design: a wide field-of-view, high resolution, binocular, full-color, totally crashworthy system.

  6. The Army/Air Force RAMCAD (Reliability and Maintainability Computer-Aided Design) Program Progress Report Through September 1989

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-01-01

    deal with platforms and their weapons. Two approaches emerged from this effort. The first plan was to address the benefits and the problems involved in...inadam~ or on a remnoftd lcod oompLusr. 3. The Nwaiguior tabthe DGMSIt aD wWe rq4he datatote ApicadwProW tip FaMW Tebs. *4. The didaI formailed for...demonstrated the benefits to be gained in time and training cost of a common method for operating different computer programs. It is this common mode of

  7. Russian war surgery in 1812: 200 years since Russia's war triumph.

    PubMed

    Boсkeria, Leo A; Glyantsev, Sergey P; Kolesnikov, Yan G

    2012-01-01

    Specific wounds inflicted on soldiers and officers of the Russian Army by French firearms and cold weapon and wound treatment by Russian surgeons during 1812 Napoleon's invasion (better known in Russia as the Patriotic War of 1812) are discussed. An inference is made that the then surgical treatment was not only administered at a high level but was also versatile and efficient and thus could make a certain contribution to the victory of the Russian arms. Copyright © 2012 Surgical Associates Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  8. Department of the Army Justification of Estimates for Fiscal Year 1985 Submitted to Congress February 1984, Procurement, Programs, Aircraft, Missiles, Weapons & Tracked Combat Vehicles. Part 1. Aircraft

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-02-01

    1,813,700 2,184,600 1,835,000 Direct Obligation Section 1 - PURPOSE AND SCOPE Provides for procurement and manufacture of airplates, helicopters, and...installation unless the item is furnished to a manufacturer , who provides parts and labor under a single contract (excluding normal GFE). This...of $17.0 milion is requested in FY 1985 to fund long leand items associated with the JOINT STABS ground stations, These ground stations will provide

  9. CBRN Weapons of Mass Destruction: The Relevance of the United States Armys Chemical Corps in the Support of Homeland Security and Defense against State and Non-State Actors

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-06-09

    scorpion- bombs /6.html. 42 Smart, 12. 19 infecting clothing with smallpox and yellow fever and then sold the clothing to unsuspicious Union troops...focusing on the use of biological warfare by terrorists.43 Radiological An example of a radiological dispersal device (RDD) is a “dirty bomb .” It is a...combination of explosives and radioactive material. Most dirty bombs will not release enough radiation to kill people or cause severe illness

  10. The Stillborn Army: Political Contention and the Fate of De Gaulle’s Armee de Metier

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-05-25

    the Germans in antitank weapons S 1Anthony Adamthwaite, France and the Coming of the Second World War 1936-1939 (London: Frank Cass & Co., 1977), xii...Liddell-Hart, . -. History of the Second World War (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1971), 21. 3 James F. McMillan, Dreyfus to de Gaulle: Politics and...Comino of the Second World War , xi. ... 55j. R. Tournoux, P~tain and de Gaulle. 1964, trans. Oliver Coburn .4,-.,., (London: William Heinemann, 1966

  11. A-10s over Kosovo. The Victory of Airpower over a Fielded Army as Told by the Airmen Who Fought in Operation Allied Force

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2003-12-01

    normally develops a very thick skin working in a fighter squadron. The ability of a pilot to give someone grief for stupid remarks or actions is...artillery, and soft- skinned vehicles) as we could find. As AFACs, Dirt and I were to locate, identify, and attack these mobile targets. The entire package...ground. This made them lethal weapons against the soft- skinned vehicles we were attacking, as well as any troops within 100 yards of the im- pact area

  12. Unmanned Systems Safety Guide for DoD Acquisition

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-06-27

    Weapons release authorization validation. • Weapons release verification . • Weapons release abort/back-out, including clean -up or reset of weapons...conditions, clean room, stress) and other environments (e.g. software engineering environment, electromagnetic) related to system utilization. Error 22 (1...A solid or liquid energetic substance (or a mixture of substances) which is in itself capable, OUSD (AT&L) Systems and Software Engineering

  13. A piloted simulation of helicopter air combat to investigate effects of variations in selected performance and control response characteristics

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Lewis, Michael S.; Mansur, M. Hossein; Chen, Robert T. N.

    1987-01-01

    A piloted simulation study investigating handling qualities and flight characteristics required for helicopter air to air combat is presented. The Helicopter Air Combat system was used to investigate this role for Army rotorcraft. Experimental variables were the maneuver envelope size (load factor and sideslip), directional axis handling qualities, and pitch and roll control-response type. Over 450 simulated, low altitude, one-on-one engagements were conducted. Results from the experiment indicate that a well damped directional response, low sideforce caused by sideslip, and some effective dihedral are all desirable for weapon system performance, good handling qualities, and low pilot workload. An angular rate command system was favored over the attitude type pitch and roll response for most applications, and an enhanced maneuver envelope size over that of current generation aircraft was found to be advantageous. Pilot technique, background, and experience are additional factors which had a significant effect on performance in the air combat tasks investigated. The implication of these results on design requirements for future helicopters is presented.

  14. KSC-99PP-1051

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1999-08-01

    VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. -- At Vandenberg Air Force Base in the early '80s, the Space Shuttle Enterprise undergoes Pathfinder fit checks at a tower. The Enterprise was built as a test vehicle and was not equipped for spaceflight. Enterprise eventually became the property of the Smithsonian Institution. Vandenberg AFB is located on the Central Coast of California about 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles. The property is comprised of parts of five Mexican land grants and a sixth grant that was transferred virtually intact to the Army. Vandenberg now is operated by the 30th Space Wing, and is the only military installation in the United States from which unmanned government and commercial satellites are launched into polar orbit. It is also the only site from which intercontinental ballistic missiles ICBMs are launched toward the Kwajalein Atoll to verify weapon systems performance. Vandenberg's military service dates back to 1941, when known as Camp Cooke it served as an Army training facility for armored and infantry troops. The main camp closed in June 1946 and was reactivated in August 1950 after the outbreak of the Korean War. The 13th and 20th Armored Divisions and the 40th, 44th, 86th, and 91st Infantry Divisions trained at Cooke. With the advent of the missile age in the 1950s, the Air Force persuaded Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson to direct the Army to transfer 64,000 acres of North Camp Cooke to the Air Force for use as a missile launch and training base. In 1958, Camp Cooke was renamed Vandenberg Air Force Base in honor of the late General Hoyt S. Vandenberg, second Air Force Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force and chief architect of today's modern Air Force. Photo Credit: NASA

  15. Issues With Access to Acquisition Data and Information in the Department of Defense: Doing Data Right in Weapon System Acquisition

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-04-30

    Defense: Doing Data Right in Weapon System Acquisition Nancy Moore, Senior Management Scientist, RAND Megan McKernan, Defense Research Analyst...Access to Acquisition Data & Information in the Department of Defense: Doing Data Right in Weapon System Acquisition Nancy Moore, Senior Management...With Access to Acquisition Data and Information in the Department of Defense: Doing Data Right in Weapon System Acquisition Nancy Y. Moore—is a

  16. Terror Weapons: The British Experience of Gas and Its Treatment in the First World War

    PubMed Central

    Jones, Edgar

    2016-01-01

    Chemical weapons accounted for only 1 per cent of the 750,000 British troops killed in the First World War and yet caused disproportionate casualties (estimated at 180,100). The considerable investment in the development of new toxins and methods of delivery was designed to maintain the elements of surprise and uncertainty as these accentuated their psychological effect. Soldiers were continually challenged on the battlefield by combinations of different types of agent designed to undermine their confidence in respirators, disorientate them, and erode their morale. At first, army doctors practised defensive medicine, invaliding their patients for protracted periods to the UK or base hospitals. By 1917, progressive study of the physical and psychological effects of different types of toxin allowed physicians to design new management strategies. Borrowing ideas from shell shock, specialist units were set up closer to the front line and medical officers taught to identify crucial points in the course of illness to accelerate recovery times and forestall the accretion of psychosomatic symptoms. PMID:27917027

  17. Terror Weapons: The British Experience of Gas and Its Treatment in the First World War.

    PubMed

    Jones, Edgar

    2014-07-01

    Chemical weapons accounted for only 1 per cent of the 750,000 British troops killed in the First World War and yet caused disproportionate casualties (estimated at 180,100). The considerable investment in the development of new toxins and methods of delivery was designed to maintain the elements of surprise and uncertainty as these accentuated their psychological effect. Soldiers were continually challenged on the battlefield by combinations of different types of agent designed to undermine their confidence in respirators, disorientate them, and erode their morale. At first, army doctors practised defensive medicine, invaliding their patients for protracted periods to the UK or base hospitals. By 1917, progressive study of the physical and psychological effects of different types of toxin allowed physicians to design new management strategies. Borrowing ideas from shell shock, specialist units were set up closer to the front line and medical officers taught to identify crucial points in the course of illness to accelerate recovery times and forestall the accretion of psychosomatic symptoms.

  18. Army Contract Writing System (ACWS)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-03-01

    2016 Major Automated Information System Annual Report Army Contract Writing System (ACWS) Defense Acquisition Management Information Retrieval...Program Information Program Name Army Contract Writing System (ACWS) DoD Component Army Responsible Office Program Manager References MAIS...UNCLASSIFIED 4 Program Description The Army Contract Writing System (ACWS) will be the Army’s single, next-generation, enterprise-wide contract writing

  19. The U.S. Army Occupational and Environmental Medicine Residency at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland: 1960-1996.

    PubMed

    Gaydos, Joel C; Mallon, Timothy M; Rice, William A

    2016-11-01

    Reorganization of the Army and critical assessment of Army Graduate Medical Education programs prompted the Occupational and Environmental Medicine (OEM) Consultant to the Army Surgeon General to initiate a review of current Army OEM residency training. Available information indicated the Army OEM residency at Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD, was the first and longest operating Army OEM residency. Describing this residency was identified as the first step in the review, with the objectives of determining why the residency was started and sustained and its relevance to the needs of the Army. Records possibly related to the residency were reviewed, starting with 1954 since certification of physicians as Occupation Medicine specialists began in 1955. Interviews were conducted with selected physicians who had strong affiliations with the Army residency and the practice of Army OEM. The Army OEM residency began in 1960 and closed in 1996 with the transfer of Army OEM residency training to the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD. Over 36 years, 47 uniformed residency graduates were identified; 44 were from the Army. Forty graduated between 1982 and 1996. The OEM residency was part of a dynamic cycle. Uniformed OEM leaders identified the knowledge and skills required of military OEM physicians and where these people should be stationed in the global Army. Rotations at military sites to acquire the needed knowledge and skills were integrated into the residency. Residency graduates were assigned to positions where they were needed. Having uniformed residents and preceptors facilitated the development of trust with military leaders and access to areas where OEM physician skills and knowledge could have a positive impact. Early reports indicated the residency was important in recruiting and retaining OEM physicians, with emphasis placed on supporting the Army industrial base. The late 1970s into the 1990s was a more dynamic period. There was heightened interest in environmental protection and restoration of military installations, and in the threats posed by nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. Additionally, President Reagan initiated a military buildup that brought new health risks to soldiers who would use and maintain modern equipment. Army OEM physicians were required to possess competencies in many areas, to include depots in the Army industrial base, occupational health for the soldier for exposures like carbon monoxide in armored vehicles, military unique exposures like those from chemical threat agents, and environmental medicine to assess health risks on contaminated U.S. military sites and from exposures of deployed forces. These offered interesting OEM training opportunities that challenged residents in the program and helped recruit new residents. The strength of the first Army OEM residency was that it was part of a dynamic cycle that consisted of identifying and defining Army OEM needs, training physicians to meet those needs and assigning residency graduates to positions where they would have a positive impact. This paradigm can be used as the basis for contemporary assessments of the Army's need for uniformed OEM physicians and a uniformed OEM residency program. Reprint & Copyright © 2016 Association of Military Surgeons of the U.S.

  20. 22 CFR 121.1 - General. The United States Munitions List.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-04-01

    ...) Firearms or other weapons (e.g. insurgency-counterinsurgency, close assault weapons systems) having a... IV. * (d) Kinetic energy weapon systems specifically designed or modified for destruction or... physical test models. (i) Autoloading systems for electronic programming of projectile function for the...

  1. Methodology. Volume 3

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1997-02-01

    modification, test, and production System operation, support, and maturation Weapon System Life Cycle Management Weapon systems Attainment...information management systems • Weapon systems electronics context – Focuses on many types of interactions » Information » Jamming » Support – Deals with...concepts • C4I context – Focuses on C4I information management systems – Defines the C4I systems and their information interchange requirements

  2. Safety and Suitability for Service Assessment Testing of Large Caliber Ammunition Greater Than 40MM

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-07-02

    2 July 2013 2 Page Paragraph 9.2 Insensitive Munitions Assessment ........................................ 14 9.3 Munition Software System ...encounter during storage and transportation. 3.12 Weapon System . A weapon and those components required for its operation, comprising the aggregate of...Provide a positive indexing system on the cartridge case to ensure proper orientation of the case when it is loaded into the weapon. 6.9 Weapon

  3. 48 CFR 225.7005 - Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote. 225.7005 Section 225.7005 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... on certain chemical weapons antidote. ...

  4. 48 CFR 225.7005 - Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote. 225.7005 Section 225.7005 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... on certain chemical weapons antidote. ...

  5. 48 CFR 225.7005 - Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote. 225.7005 Section 225.7005 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... on certain chemical weapons antidote. ...

  6. 48 CFR 225.7005 - Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote. 225.7005 Section 225.7005 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... on certain chemical weapons antidote. ...

  7. 48 CFR 225.7005 - Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Restriction on certain chemical weapons antidote. 225.7005 Section 225.7005 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... on certain chemical weapons antidote. ...

  8. The infrared image simulation of the tank under different movement states

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Gao, Xiang; Mu, Cheng-po; Peng, Ming-song; Dong, Qing-xian; Zhang, Rui-heng

    2017-07-01

    Tank, as a vital ground weapon, plays an irreplaceable role in the war. The article did the research of infrared image of the tank. Firstly, the 3D model of tank was established. And then the infrared radiation model of the target was constructed by analysing the infrared characteristics of the tank's different parts.. Finally the infrared radiation value of the tank under different states was calculated and the simulation of infrared characteristics of the tank under different states was done, which will provide reference for the research on infrared characteristics of the army's battlefield target.

  9. U.S. Army Air Forces in World War II. Combat Chronology 1941-1945

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-01-01

    B-17’s and B-24’s bomb M/Ys at Troyes , Reims, Sarreguemines, Metz, Liege, and Brussels. 5/1/44 Ninth AF The last of the 11 bomb gps (8 medium and 3...weather and photo rcn over Shimushu and bomb Matsuwa area. 5/25/44 Eighth AF 859 B-17’s and B-24’s operating in 4 forces bomb M/Ys at Mulhouse, Troyes ...Dessau, Oschersleben, Halberstadt, Rotenburg, Zwischenahn, Oldenburg, Diepholz, and Handorf; M/Ys at Brussels, Troyes , and Reims; V-weapon sites at Watten

  10. Index to Watervliet Arsenal Technical Reports, 1973

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1973-09-01

    T-2-46-73 RS4---07 SU8JECT I~p steel cont. Temeratuzre M-WV-T-1-25-73 R-W-T-l8-73 R-VT64-3 R-W-T-1-53-73 R-IP-T-6-3-73 Tensile Propertiss H-WVT-6-9...unlimited. U. S. Army Weapons Command Corrosion of" high strength steel in gaseous environment is largely divided in IrcLa, high temperature oxidation...and stress corrosion cracking at lower t ,, ;i - tru,. Ili 1 h temperature oxidation of the 4330 steel was conducted in CO-CO, ml res ii: to 1300.%. The

  11. Tests of the higher order turbulence model for atmospheric circulations (HOTMAC) at Deseret Chemical Depot

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Costigan, K.R.

    1998-11-01

    Deseret Chemical Depot is one of the US Army`s storage facilities for its stockpile of chemical weapon agents. Congress has directed the Department of Defense to eliminate the aging stockpiles, which have existed since the end of World War II, and the US Army is destroying these lethal chemical munitions. Although the danger is slight, accurate predictions of the wind field in the valley are necessary for dispersion calculations in the event of an accident involving toxic chemicals at the depot. There are several small communities in Rush and Tooele valleys, including the town of Tooele, and Salt Lake Citymore » is located 65 km to the Northeast of Deseret Chemical Depot South area, at 1,300 m MSL and beyond the Oquirrh Mountains. The purpose of this report is to carry out three-dimensional numerical simulations of the atmospheric circulations in the region around Deseret Chemical Depot with the Higher Order Turbulence Model for Atmospheric Circulations (HOTMAC) and to evaluate the performance of the model. The code had been modified to assimilate local meteorological observations through the use of Newtonian nudging. The nudging scheme takes advantage of the extensive network of local observations in the valley.« less

  12. Nanotechnology research and development for military and industrial applications

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ruffin, Paul B.; Brantley, Christina L.; Edwards, Eugene; Roberts, J. Keith; Chew, William; Warren, Larry C.; Ashley, Paul R.; Everitt, Henry O.; Webster, Eric; Foreman, John V.; Sanghadasa, Mohan; Crutcher, Sihon H.; Temmen, Mark G.; Varadan, Vijay; Hayduke, Devlin; Wu, Pae C.; Khoury, Christopher G.; Yang, Yang; Kim, Tong-Ho; Vo-Dinh, Tuan; Brown, April S.; Callahan, John

    2011-04-01

    Researchers at the Army Aviation and Missile Research, Development, and Engineering Center (AMRDEC) have initiated multidiscipline efforts to develop nano-based structures and components for insertion into advanced missile, aviation, and autonomous air and ground systems. The objective of the research is to exploit unique phenomena for the development of novel technology to enhance warfighter capabilities and produce precision weapons. The key technology areas that the authors are exploring include nano-based microsensors, nano-energetics, nano-batteries, nano-composites, and nano-plasmonics. By integrating nano-based devices, structures, and materials into weaponry, the Army can revolutionize existing (and future) missile systems by significantly reducing the size, weight and cost. The major research thrust areas include the development of chemical sensors to detect rocket motor off-gassing and toxic industrial chemicals; the development of highly sensitive/selective, self-powered miniaturized acoustic sensors for battlefield surveillance and reconnaissance; the development of a minimum signature solid propellant with increased ballistic and physical properties that meet insensitive munitions requirements; the development of nano-structured material for higher voltage thermal batteries and higher energy density storage; the development of advanced composite materials that provide high frequency damping for inertial measurement units' packaging; and the development of metallic nanostructures for ultraviolet surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy. The current status of the overall AMRDEC Nanotechnology research efforts is disclosed in this paper. Critical technical challenges, for the various technologies, are presented. The authors' approach for overcoming technical barriers and achieving required performance is also discussed. Finally, the roadmap for each technology, as well as the overall program, is presented.

  13. Vertical nuclear proliferation.

    PubMed

    Sidel, Victor W

    2007-01-01

    All the nuclear-weapon states are working to develop new nuclear-weapon systems and upgrade their existing ones. Although the US Congress has recently blocked further development of small nuclear weapons and earth-penetrating nuclear weapons, the United States is planning a range of new warheads under the Reliable Replacement Warhead programme, and renewing its nuclear weapons infrastructure. The United Kingdom is spending 1 billion pounds sterling on updating the Atomic Weapons Establishment at Aldermaston, and about 20 billion pounds sterling on replacing its Vanguard submarines and maintaining its Trident warhead stockpile. The US has withdrawn from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and plans to install missile defence systems in Poland and the Czech Republic; Russia threatens to upgrade its nuclear countermeasures. The nuclear-weapon states should comply with their obligations under Article VI of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, as summarised in the 13-point plan agreed at the 2000 NPT Review Conference, and they should negotiate a Nuclear Weapons Convention.

  14. Chemical and biological warfare. Should defenses be researched and deployed?

    PubMed

    Orient, J M

    1989-08-04

    The threat of chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction has intensified because of improved delivery systems and advances in chemistry, genetics, and other sciences. Possible US responses to this threat include deterrence, defenses, and/or disarmament, including a reaffirmation of the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention of 1972, which is now in jeopardy. This article discusses the history of chemical and biological warfare, existing and potential weapons, the proliferation of weapons and delivery systems, ways to prevent the use of these weapons, and ways to protect populations from their effects.

  15. Detection and treatment of chemical weapons and/or biological pathogens

    DOEpatents

    Mariella Jr., Raymond P.

    2004-09-07

    A system for detection and treatment of chemical weapons and/or biological pathogens uses a detector system, an electrostatic precipitator or scrubber, a circulation system, and a control. The precipitator or scrubber is activated in response to a signal from the detector upon the detection of chemical weapons and/or biological pathogens.

  16. Design and implementation of a nuclear weapons management system submodule: Shipboard security force system. Master's thesis

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Settlemyer, S.R.

    1991-09-01

    The Nuclear Weapons Management System combines the strengths of an expert system with the flexibility of a database management system to assist the Weapons Officer, Security Officer, and the Personnel Reliability Program Officer in the performance of administrative duties associated with the nuclear weapons programs in the United States Navy. This thesis examines the need for, and ultimately the design of, a system that will assist the Security Officer in administrative duties associated with the Shipboard Self Defense Force. This system, designed and coded utilizing dBASE IV, can be implemented as a stand alone system. Furthermore, it interfaces with themore » expert system submodule that handles the PRP screening process.« less

  17. Vulnerability assessment of a space based weapon platform electronic system exposed to a thermonuclear weapon detonation

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Perez, C. L.; Johnson, J. O.

    Rapidly changing world events, the increased number of nations with inter-continental ballistic missile capability, and the proliferation of nuclear weapon technology will increase the number of nuclear threats facing the world today. Monitoring these nation's activities and providing an early warning and/or intercept system via reconnaissance and surveillance satellites and space based weapon platforms is a viable deterrent against a surprise nuclear attack. However, the deployment of satellite and weapon platform assets in space will subject the sensitive electronic equipment to a variety of natural and man-made radiation environments. These include Van Allen Belt protons and electrons; galactic and solar flare protons; and neutrons, gamma rays, and x-rays from intentionally detonated fission and fusion weapons. In this paper, the MASH vl.0 code system is used to estimate the dose to the critical electronics components of an idealized space based weapon platform from neutron and gamma-ray radiation emitted from a thermonuclear weapon detonation in space. Fluence and dose assessments were performed for the platform fully loaded, and in several stages representing limited engagement scenarios. The results indicate vulnerabilities to the Command, Control, and Communication bay instruments from radiation damage for a nuclear weapon detonation for certain source/platform orientations. The distance at which damage occurs will depend on the weapon yield (n,(gamma)/kiloton) and size (kilotons).

  18. Life Cycle Cost of C-130E Weapon System.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1977-07-01

    AFHRL-TR-7746 A-,I K lR FORCE g•r ___ FORCELIFE CYCLE COST OF C-130E WEAPON SYSTEM H By U Frank D. Brown "Gary A. WalkerU David H. WilsonBooing Awsp...I REPORT DOCUMENTO ON PAGE BEFORE COMPLETING FORM I?~ AFHR R.77-46 ( ~ LIFE CYCLE COST OF:C413A~ WEAPON SYSTEMteim.e M- 29 June 116- 3 June...human resources cost data life cycle cost historical weapon system analysis (I-WSA) inateuial resources 20). ABSTRACT (Con tinue on reverse siLa Mf

  19. Damage assessment of long-range rocket system by electromagnetic pulse weapon

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Cao, Lingyu; Liu, Guoqing; Li, Jinming

    2017-08-01

    This paper analyzes the damage mechanism and characteristics of electromagnetic pulse weapon, establishes the index system of survivability of long-range rocket launcher system, and uses AHP method to establish the combat effectiveness model of long-range rocket missile system. According to the damage mechanism and characteristics of electromagnetic pulse weapon, the damage effect of the remote rocket system is established by using the exponential method to realize the damage efficiency of the remote rocket system.

  20. 48 CFR 25.301-3 - Weapons.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Weapons. 25.301-3 Section... FOREIGN ACQUISITION Contracts Performed Outside the United States 25.301-3 Weapons. The contracting officer shall follow agency procedures and the weapons policy established by the combatant commander or...

  1. 48 CFR 25.301-3 - Weapons.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Weapons. 25.301-3 Section... FOREIGN ACQUISITION Contracts Performed Outside the United States 25.301-3 Weapons. The contracting officer shall follow agency procedures and the weapons policy established by the combatant commander or...

  2. 48 CFR 25.301-3 - Weapons.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Weapons. 25.301-3 Section... FOREIGN ACQUISITION Contracts Performed Outside the United States 25.301-3 Weapons. The contracting officer shall follow agency procedures and the weapons policy established by the combatant commander or...

  3. 48 CFR 25.301-3 - Weapons.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false Weapons. 25.301-3 Section... FOREIGN ACQUISITION Contracts Performed Outside the United States 25.301-3 Weapons. The contracting officer shall follow agency procedures and the weapons policy established by the combatant commander or...

  4. 48 CFR 25.301-3 - Weapons.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Weapons. 25.301-3 Section... FOREIGN ACQUISITION Contracts Performed Outside the United States 25.301-3 Weapons. The contracting officer shall follow agency procedures and the weapons policy established by the combatant commander or...

  5. Non-Lethal Weapons: A Technology Gap or Lack or Available Systems, Training, and Proper Application

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-06-10

    Ibid., 190-191. 9 Jonathan D. Moreno, “Medical Ethics and Non-Lethal Weapons ,” The American Journal of Bioethics 4, no. 4 (Fall 2004): W1...Quarterly (Spring-Summer 2001): 18-22. Moreno, Jonathan D. “Medical Ethics and Non-Lethal Weapons .” The American Journal of Bioethics 4, no. 4 (Fall...NON-LETHAL WEAPONS : A TECHNOLOGY GAP OR LACK OF AVAILABLE SYSTEMS, TRAINING, AND PROPER APPLICATION A thesis presented to

  6. Armor and anesthesia: exposure, feeling, and the soldier's body.

    PubMed

    MacLeish, Kenneth T

    2012-03-01

    For many civilians, the high-tech weapons, armor, and military medicine with which U.S. soldiers are equipped present an image of lethal capacity and physical invulnerability. But, as this article explores, soldiers themselves just as often associate the life-sustaining technology of modern warfare with feelings that range from a pragmatic ambivalence about exposure to harm all the way to profoundly unsettling vulnerability. This article, based on fieldwork among soldiers and military families at the U.S. Army's Ft. Hood, examines sensory and affective dimensions of soldiers' intimate bodily relationships with the technologies that alternately or even simultaneously keep them alive and expose them to harm. I argue that modern military discipline and technology conspire to cultivate soldiers as highly durable, capable, unfeeling, interchangeable bodies, or what might be called, after Susan Buck-Morss (1992), anesthetic subjects. But for soldiers themselves, their training, combat environment, protective gear, and weapons are a rich font of both emotional and bodily feeling that exists in complex tension with the also deeply felt military imperative to carry on in the face of extreme discomfort and danger.

  7. Issues in chemical and biological terrorism.

    PubMed

    Salem, Harry

    2003-01-01

    This manuscript describes the overview presented at the 23rd Annual Meeting of the American College of Toxicology in 2002. Although it is recognized that weapons of mass destruction that can be used against our military and civilian populations include chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) agents, this overview is limited primarily to chemical and biological (CB) agents. The issues of CB terrorism are discussed in terms of When, What, How, and Who. The US Army has been providing chemical and biological solutions since 1917, and has since 1996 applied these solutions to homeland defense and domestic preparedness. The use of chemical and biological agents as terrorist weapons both in the United States and elsewhere in the world is reviewed. The CB threat spectrum is presented, as is the further categorization of biological threat agents by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). In addition, the CB agents considered to be a potential threat to our water supply are also presented. These are agents that are water soluble, stable, and resistant to water treatment and/or disinfection. The overview concludes with the chronological accomplishments of ECBC since 1917.

  8. Evaluation of Multi-Level Support Structure Requirements for New Weapon Systems.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-09-01

    transformer 1 total consumed manhours on this level 19.45 hrs average manhrs within 4 weeks on this level : .38 hrs average rounded number of mainten; personal ...major unit data to provide conclusions about the logistics behavior of failing weapon systems. The modeling of system behavior with CAESAR has severa-l...characteristic data and major unit data to provide conclusions about the logistics behavior of failing weapon systems. The modelling of system behavior

  9. Concealed weapons detection using electromagnetic resonances

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hunt, Allen R.; Hogg, R. Douglas; Foreman, William

    1998-12-01

    Concealed weapons pose a significant threat to both law enforcement and security agency personnel. The uncontrolled environments associated with peacekeeping and the move toward relaxation of concealed weapons laws here in the U.S. provide a strong motivation for developing weapons detection technologies which are noninvasive and can function noncooperatively. Existing weapons detection systems are primarily oriented to detecting metal and require the cooperation of the person being searched. The new generation of detectors under development that focuses primarily on imaging methods, faces problems associated with privacy issues. There remains a need for a weapons detector which is portable, detects weapons remotely, avoids the issues associated with privacy rights, can tell the difference between car keys and a knife, and is affordable enough that one can be issued to every peacekeeper and law enforcement officer. AKELA is developing a concealed weapons detector that uses wideband radar techniques to excite natural electromagnetic resonances that characterize the size, shape, and material composition of an object. Neural network processing is used to classify the difference between weapons and nuisance objects. We have constructed both time and frequency domain test systems and used them to gather experimental data on a variety of armed and unarmed individuals. These experiments have been performed in an environment similar to the operational environment. Preliminary results from these experiments show that it is possible to detect a weapon being carried by an individual from a distance of 10 to 15 feet, and to detect a weapon being concealed behind the back. The power required is about 100 milliwatts. A breadboard system is being fabricated and will be used by AKELA and our law enforcement partner to gather data in operationally realistic situations. While a laptop computer will control the breadboard system, the wideband radar electronics will fit in a box the size of a CD ROM drive of a computer.

  10. 15 CFR Supplement No. 7 to Part 742 - Description of Major Weapons Systems

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... by employing guided missiles, unguided rockets, bombs, guns, cannons, or other weapons of destruction... technologies. (10) Precision Guided Munitions (PGMs), including “smart bombs”: Weapons used in precision bombing missions such as specially designed weapons, or bombs fitted with kits to allow them to be guided...

  11. Weapons in Schools. NSSC Resource Paper.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Butterfield, George E., Ed.; Turner, Brenda, Ed.

    More than ever, our public school system must confront weapons in schools and become aware of steadily rising statistics on youth homicide and suicide. This report delineates the problem, discusses why children carry weapons to school, and outlines strategies for keeping weapons out of schools and for improving school safety. Although some…

  12. International Infantry and Joint Services Small Arms Systems Symposium: Exhibition and Firing Demonstration

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-05-22

    operation of weapon system) Phit Weapon System (e.g. dispersion) Most important influence ● Operator ● Distance to target together with ballistic...Suitable for a variety of weapons where ballistical correction to improve range performance and PHit /PKill is essential ● Prepare system for additional...status ● Prototypes have been delivered to FMV (Swedish Defence Materiel Administration) ● Demonstrated for NATO in Toledo 2007-02-15: > 65% PHit

  13. Holographic gunsights for small arms

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tai, Anthony M.; Sieczka, Eric J.; Radler, Richard; Upatnieks, Juris

    1996-05-01

    Holographic gunsights were first demonstrated in the mid 1970s by researchers at the Environmental Research Institute of Michigan (ERIM) under contracts with the Air Force and the Army. The sights utilized He-Ne gas lasers and were designed for use with large weapons systems. With the advent of low cost visible laser diode, ERIM formed a new company, EOTech, to develop, manufacture and market a holographic gun sight for small arms. A hologram is used to reconstruct the image of a reticle pattern that appears at the target plane. Unlike red-dot sights, virtually any reticle pattern, 2D or 3D, can be formed. The design challenges include an opto-mechanical package that is compact, light weight and low cost which can withstand recoils up to 4,000 Gs and provide fine elevation/windage pointing adjustments, and optics that are aberration-free and stable over a wide temperature range. Manufacturing challenges include the mass production of high quality holographic optics at low cost and the precision alignment of the very low f/number optics.

  14. Groundwars Version 5.0. User’s Guide

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-08-01

    model, Monte Carlo, land duel , heterogeneous forces, TANKWARS, target acquisition, combat survivability 19. ABSTRACT (Continue on reverse if necessary...land duel between two heterogeneous forces. The model simuJ.ates individual weapon systems and employs Monte Carlo probability theory as its primary...is a weapon systems effectiveness model which provides the results of a land duel between two forces. The model simulates individual weapon systems

  15. Department of the Army Justification of Estimates for Fiscal Year 1985 Submitted to Congress February 1984, Procurement, Programs, Aircraft, Missiles, Weapons & Tracked Combat Vehicles. Part 4. Ammunition.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-02-01

    Bushmaster 5860108 - Volunteer AN - Intermolecular - Ethylenediamine 5.7 dinitrate/ amonium nitrate (M) 5860122 - X-Facility: I1W - Mine MM139 Volcano...1 40 13 0001 AdJullan te prior yew truat fund or d e -3,41 17.0001 Mece feeia of prior y Otlgtte -l -56,606 Unoba Igeted balane evatIlell. MY 21...transfarred 10.000 10,000 IobiIgst d balance allloe. MO 𔃾.40M2 For completles of prior year budgt plane *1 In 39.0001 Itdgot authrlIty 4-6 Fe’ tory

  16. Detection and classification of concealed weapons using a magnetometer-based portal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kotter, Dale K.; Roybal, Lyle G.; Polk, Robert E.

    2002-08-01

    A concealed weapons detection technology was developed through the support of the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) to provide a non intrusive means for rapid detection, location, and archiving of data (including visual) of potential suspects and weapon threats. This technology, developed by the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL), has been applied in a portal style weapons detection system using passive magnetic sensors as its basis. This paper will report on enhancements to the weapon detection system to enable weapon classification and to discriminate threats from non-threats. Advanced signal processing algorithms were used to analyze the magnetic spectrum generated when a person passes through a portal. These algorithms analyzed multiple variables including variance in the magnetic signature from random weapon placement and/or orientation. They perform pattern recognition and calculate the probability that the collected magnetic signature correlates to a known database of weapon versus non-weapon responses. Neural networks were used to further discriminate weapon type and identify controlled electronic items such as cell phones and pagers. False alarms were further reduced by analyzing the magnetic detector response by using a Joint Time Frequency Analysis digital signal processing technique. The frequency components and power spectrum for a given sensor response were derived. This unique fingerprint provided additional information to aid in signal analysis. This technology has the potential to produce major improvements in weapon detection and classification.

  17. Project on Advanced Systems and Concepts for Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction (PASCC)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-09-01

    Proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD, defined as nuclear, chemical , and biological) and weapons of mass effect (WME, defined as other high... Chemical Weapons • Scoping Study for a U.S.-Israel Strategic Dialogued 5 • U.S.-India Strategic Dialogue • Implications of Indian Tactical...of Chemical Weapons : Strategic Dialogue, Research, and Report Performer: Arizona State University (ASU) Principal Investigator: Orde Kittrie Cost

  18. Is this the time for a high-energy laser weapon program?

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kiel, David H.

    2013-02-01

    The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) has made large investments weaponizing laser technology for air defense. Despite billions of dollars spent, there has not been a successful transition of a high-energy laser (HEL) weapon from the lab to the field. Is the dream of a low-cost-per-shot, deep-magazine, speed-of-light HEL weapon an impossible dream or a set of technologies that are ready to emerge on the modern battlefield? Because of the rapid revolution taking place in modern warfare that is making conventional defensive weapons very expensive relative to the offensive weapons systems, the pull for less expensive air defense may necessitate a HEL weapon system. Also, due to the recent technological developments in solid-state lasers (SSL), especially fiber lasers, used throughout manufacturing for cutting and welding, a HEL weapon finally may be able to meet all the requirements of ease of use, sustainability, and reliability. Due to changes in warfare and SSL technology advances, the era of HEL weapons isn't over; it may be just starting if DoD takes an evolutionary approach to fielding a HEL weapon. The U.S. Navy, with its large ships and their available electric power, should lead the way.

  19. 36 CFR 13.30 - Weapons, traps and nets.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-07-01

    ... 36 Parks, Forests, and Public Property 1 2011-07-01 2011-07-01 false Weapons, traps and nets. 13... INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SYSTEM UNITS IN ALASKA General Provisions § 13.30 Weapons, traps and nets. (a... of this chapter, the following are prohibited— (1) Possessing a weapon, trap, or net; (2) Carrying a...

  20. 36 CFR 13.30 - Weapons, traps and nets.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-07-01

    ... 36 Parks, Forests, and Public Property 1 2014-07-01 2014-07-01 false Weapons, traps and nets. 13... INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SYSTEM UNITS IN ALASKA General Provisions § 13.30 Weapons, traps and nets. (a... of this chapter, the following are prohibited— (1) Possessing a weapon, trap, or net; (2) Carrying a...

  1. 36 CFR 13.30 - Weapons, traps and nets.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... 36 Parks, Forests, and Public Property 1 2012-07-01 2012-07-01 false Weapons, traps and nets. 13... INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SYSTEM UNITS IN ALASKA General Provisions § 13.30 Weapons, traps and nets. (a... of this chapter, the following are prohibited— (1) Possessing a weapon, trap, or net; (2) Carrying a...

  2. 50 CFR 27.43 - Weapons other than firearms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... 50 Wildlife and Fisheries 8 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Weapons other than firearms. 27.43 Section... (CONTINUED) THE NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE SYSTEM PROHIBITED ACTS Disturbing Violations: With Weapons § 27.43 Weapons other than firearms. The use or possession of cross bows, bows and arrows, air guns, spears, gigs...

  3. 50 CFR 27.43 - Weapons other than firearms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... 50 Wildlife and Fisheries 9 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Weapons other than firearms. 27.43 Section... (CONTINUED) THE NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE SYSTEM PROHIBITED ACTS Disturbing Violations: With Weapons § 27.43 Weapons other than firearms. The use or possession of cross bows, bows and arrows, air guns, spears, gigs...

  4. 50 CFR 27.43 - Weapons other than firearms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... 50 Wildlife and Fisheries 9 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false Weapons other than firearms. 27.43 Section... (CONTINUED) THE NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE SYSTEM PROHIBITED ACTS Disturbing Violations: With Weapons § 27.43 Weapons other than firearms. The use or possession of cross bows, bows and arrows, air guns, spears, gigs...

  5. 36 CFR 13.30 - Weapons, traps and nets.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... 36 Parks, Forests, and Public Property 1 2010-07-01 2010-07-01 false Weapons, traps and nets. 13... INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SYSTEM UNITS IN ALASKA General Provisions § 13.30 Weapons, traps and nets. (a... of this chapter, the following are prohibited— (1) Possessing a weapon, trap, or net; (2) Carrying a...

  6. 50 CFR 27.43 - Weapons other than firearms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... 50 Wildlife and Fisheries 9 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Weapons other than firearms. 27.43 Section... (CONTINUED) THE NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE SYSTEM PROHIBITED ACTS Disturbing Violations: With Weapons § 27.43 Weapons other than firearms. The use or possession of cross bows, bows and arrows, air guns, spears, gigs...

  7. 36 CFR 13.30 - Weapons, traps and nets.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ... 36 Parks, Forests, and Public Property 1 2013-07-01 2013-07-01 false Weapons, traps and nets. 13... INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SYSTEM UNITS IN ALASKA General Provisions § 13.30 Weapons, traps and nets. (a... of this chapter, the following are prohibited— (1) Possessing a weapon, trap, or net; (2) Carrying a...

  8. 50 CFR 27.43 - Weapons other than firearms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... 50 Wildlife and Fisheries 6 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Weapons other than firearms. 27.43 Section... (CONTINUED) THE NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE SYSTEM PROHIBITED ACTS Disturbing Violations: With Weapons § 27.43 Weapons other than firearms. The use or possession of cross bows, bows and arrows, air guns, spears, gigs...

  9. An Overview of the Greyscales Lethality Assessment Methodology

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-01-01

    code has already been integrated into the Weapon Systems Division MECA and DUEL missile engagement simulations. It can also be integrated into...incorporated into a variety of simulations. The code has already been integrated into the Weapon Systems Division MECA and DUEL missile engagement...capable of being incorporated into a variety of simulations. The code has already been integrated into the Weapon Systems Division MECA and DUEL missile

  10. 36th ATLANTA EXECUTIVE SEMINAR

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-04-04

    Elimination of Chemical Weapons Program. In addition, he is responsible for appointing, managing, and evaluating program executive officers as well as...little can be spared.” The National Commission of Fiscal responsibility, The Moment, December 2010 Slide 14 Congressional Weapon System Concerns ...Acquisition and Technology (A&T), and the Defense Acquisition Board on acquisition/procurement strategies for all major weapon systems programs

  11. Alternative World Scenarios for a New Order of Nations.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-01-01

    chemical, biological and nuclear weapons continues. Despite the reduction of world tensions, almost every industrial nation will be armed with a range...of conventional, chemical, and biological weapons. Most of these weapons will have been supplied to them by the EC, the United States, and China before...weapons and delivery systems as well as chemical and biological weapons to build or increase their arsenals. The combined effect of new found economic

  12. No neurochemical evidence of brain injury after blast overpressure by repeated explosions or firing heavy weapons.

    PubMed

    Blennow, K; Jonsson, M; Andreasen, N; Rosengren, L; Wallin, A; Hellström, P A; Zetterberg, H

    2011-04-01

    Psychiatric and neurological symptoms are common among soldiers exposed to blast without suffering a direct head injury. It is not known whether such symptoms are direct consequences of blast overpressure. To examine if repeated detonating explosions or firing if of heavy weapons is associated with neurochemical evidence of brain damage. Three controlled experimental studies. In the first, army officers were exposed to repeated firing of a FH77B howitzer or a bazooka. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was taken post-exposure to measure biomarkers for brain damage. In the second, officers were exposed for up to 150 blasts by firing a bazooka, and in the third to 100 charges of detonating explosives of 180 dB. Serial serum samples were taken after exposure. Results were compared with a control group consisting of 19 unexposed age-matched healthy volunteers. The CSF biomarkers for neuronal/axonal damage (tau and neurofilament protein), glial cell injury (GFAP and S-100b), blood-brain barrier damage (CSF/serum albumin ratio) and hemorrhages (hemoglobin and bilirubin) and the serum GFAP and S-100b showed normal and stable levels in all exposed officers. Repeated exposure to high-impact blast does not result in any neurochemical evidence of brain damage. These findings are of importance for soldiers regularly exposed to high-impact blast when firing artillery shells or other types of heavy weapons. © 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S.

  13. Weapon System Management to Directorate of Logistics Management Systems Requirements (XRB) DCS/Plans and Programs Air Force Logistics Command Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio 45433.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-05-14

    Attachment 2 contains the reports and lessons learned which resulted from the Level II Weapon System Management activities. Attachment 3 contains the reports...and lessons learned which resulted from the Level III Weapon System Management activities. _____ r. Air Force Logistics Command Attn: Col. McConnell 2...May 14, 1982 Attachment 4 contains the plans and lessons learned which resulted from the RCC Evaluation activities. I am pleased to deliver these

  14. United States Military Posture for FY 1979. Statement by General George S. Brown, USAF Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, to the Congress.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-01-20

    adopting new short- range, visually aimed weapons as secondary arma - FOXBAT ment on many of their deployed interceptors. These weapons should enhance...i egrtedwit letal eapns. EW threat, and provide practice in tactics and:1weapon system, integrated with lethal weapons. equipment operations

  15. Study of application and key technology of the high-energy laser weapon in optoelectronic countermeasure

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Qu, Zhou; Xing, Hao; Wang, Dawei; Wang, Qiugui

    2015-10-01

    High-energy Laser weapon is a new-style which is developing rapidly nowadays. It is a one kind of direction energy weapon which can destroy the targets or make them invalid. High-energy Laser weapon has many merits such as concentrated energy, fast transmission, long operating range, satisfied precision, fast shift fire, anti-electromagnetic interference, reusability, cost-effectiveness. High-energy Laser weapon has huge potential for modern warfare since its laser beam launch attack to the target by the speed of light. High-energy Laser weapon can be deployed by multiple methods such as skyborne, carrier borne, vehicle-mounted, foundation, space platform. Besides the connection with command and control system, High-energy Laser weapon is consist of high-energy laser and beam steering. Beam steering is comprised of Large diameter launch system and Precision targeting systems. Meanwhile, beam steering includes the distance measurement of target location, detection system of television and infrared sensor, adaptive optical system of Laser atmospheric distortion correction. The development of laser technology is very fast in recent years. A variety of laser sources have been regarded as the key component in many optoelectronic devices. For directed energy weapon, the progress of laser technology has greatly improved the tactical effectiveness, such as increasing the range and strike precision. At the same time, the modern solid-state laser has become the ideal optical source for optical countermeasure, because it has high photoelectric conversion efficiency and small volume or weight. However, the total performance is limited by the mutual cooperation between different subsystems. The optical countermeasure is a complex technique after many years development. The key factor to evaluate the laser weapon can be formulated as laser energy density to target. This article elaborated the laser device technology of optoelectronic countermeasure and Photoelectric tracking technology. Also the allocation of optoelectronic countermeasure was discussed in this article. At last, this article prospected the future development of high-energy laser.

  16. Irdis: A Digital Scene Storage And Processing System For Hardware-In-The-Loop Missile Testing

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sedlar, Michael F.; Griffith, Jerry A.

    1988-07-01

    This paper describes the implementation of a Seeker Evaluation and Test Simulation (SETS) Facility at Eglin Air Force Base. This facility will be used to evaluate imaging infrared (IIR) guided weapon systems by performing various types of laboratory tests. One such test is termed Hardware-in-the-Loop (HIL) simulation (Figure 1) in which the actual flight of a weapon system is simulated as closely as possible in the laboratory. As shown in the figure, there are four major elements in the HIL test environment; the weapon/sensor combination, an aerodynamic simulator, an imagery controller, and an infrared imagery system. The paper concentrates on the approaches and methodologies used in the imagery controller and infrared imaging system elements for generating scene information. For procurement purposes, these two elements have been combined into an Infrared Digital Injection System (IRDIS) which provides scene storage, processing, and output interface to drive a radiometric display device or to directly inject digital video into the weapon system (bypassing the sensor). The paper describes in detail how standard and custom image processing functions have been combined with off-the-shelf mass storage and computing devices to produce a system which provides high sample rates (greater than 90 Hz), a large terrain database, high weapon rates of change, and multiple independent targets. A photo based approach has been used to maximize terrain and target fidelity, thus providing a rich and complex scene for weapon/tracker evaluation.

  17. Index to Army Times 1991

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-08-01

    AIRCRAFT) Winging it. Army Times; Oct. 14, 1991; 52(11): p. 26. AAC SEE ARMY ACQUISITION CORPS (AAC) AAFES SEE ARMY AND AIR FORCE EXCHANGE SERVICE (AAFES...allies in Germany. Army Times; Sept. 23, 1991; 52(8): p. 10. GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM (GPS) SEE OPERATION DESERT STORK , 1991--GLOSAL POSITIONING SYSTEM (G...COMPETITIONS Golden Knights triumph. Army Times; Oct. 28, 1991; 52(13): p. 14. GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTING OFFICE (GAO)--AUOIT--HELICOPTERS Republicans move to clip

  18. Enhancing Energy in Future Conventional Munition

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Peiris, Suhithi

    2017-06-01

    Future conventional weapons are envisioned to contain more energy per volume than current weapons. Current weapons comprise of inert steel outer case, with inner volume for energetic materials, fuzing, sensor package, propulsion system, etc. Recent research on reactive materials (RM) & new energetics, and exploiting additive manufacturing can optimize the use of both mass and volume to achieve much higher energy in future weapons. For instance, replacing inert steel with RM of similar strength, additively manufacturing fuzing packages within the weapon form factor, and combing the whole with new energetics, will enable the same lethality effects from smaller weapons as obtained from today's larger weapons. This paper will elaborate on reactive materials and properties necessary for optimal utilization in various weapon features, and touch on other aspects of enhancing energy in future conventional munition.

  19. DOD Financial Management: The Army Faces Significant Challenges in Achieving Audit Readiness for Its Military Pay

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-03-01

    Page ii GAO-12-406 Army Military Pay Audit Readiness Abbreviations ARISS Army Recruiting Information Support System ASA (M&RA) Assistant...personnel file in the Army Recruiting Information Support System ( ARISS ). This file contains the recruit’s full name, contact information, country of...system, that is, ARISS for the Army, and a paper copy, referred to as a “Packet,” is created that accompanies the recruit to the training installation

  20. Global Combat Support System - Army Increment 2 (GCSS-A Inc 2)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-03-01

    2016 Major Automated Information System Annual Report Global Combat Support System - Army Increment 2 (GCSS-A Inc 2) Defense Acquisition...Secretary of Defense PB - President’s Budget RDT&E - Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation SAE - Service Acquisition Executive TBD - To Be...Date Assigned: Program Information Program Name Global Combat Support System - Army Increment 2 (GCSS-A Inc 2) DoD Component Army Responsible

  1. Requirements Analysis for the Army Safety Management Information System (ASMIS)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-03-01

    8217_>’ Telephone Number « .. PNL-6819 Limited Distribution Requirements Analysis for the Army Safety Management Information System (ASMIS) Final...PNL-6819 REQUIREMENTS ANALYSIS FOR THE ARMY SAFETY MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM (ASMIS) FINAL REPORT J. S. Littlefield A. L. Corrigan March...accidents. This accident data is available under the Army Safety Management Information System (ASMIS) which is an umbrella for many databases

  2. Army Posture Statement: A Statement on the Posture of the United States Army, 2009

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-05-07

    Research Institute Army Physical Readiness Training (FM 3-22.02) Army Preparatory School Army Prepositioned Stocks (APS) Army Reserve Employer Relations...ARFORGEN Army Force Generation AFRICOM Africa Command AMAP Army Medical Action Plan AMC Army Material Command APA Army Prepositioned Stocks AR Army...Ordnance Disposal ES2 Every Soldier a Sensor ETF Enterprise Task Force FCS Future Combat Systems FM Field Manual FORSCOM Forces Command FY Fiscal Year

  3. Sandia National Laboratories: Integrated Military Systems

    Science.gov Websites

    Programs Nuclear Weapons About Nuclear Weapons Safety & Security Weapons Science & Technology Robotics R&D 100 Awards Laboratory Directed Research & Development Technology Deployment Centers Audit Sandia's Economic Impact Licensing & Technology Transfer Browse Technology Portfolios

  4. Sandia National Laboratories: News: Image Gallery

    Science.gov Websites

    Environmental Management System Pollution Prevention History 60 impacts Diversity Locations Facts & Figures Programs Nuclear Weapons About Nuclear Weapons Safety & Security Weapons Science & Technology Robotics R&D 100 Awards Laboratory Directed Research & Development Technology Deployment Centers

  5. Integrated Personnel and Pay System-Army Increment 2 (IPPS-A Inc 2)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-03-01

    2016 Major Automated Information System Annual Report Integrated Personnel and Pay System-Army Increment 2 (IPPS-A Inc 2) Defense Acquisition...703-325-3747 DSN Phone: 865-2915 DSN Fax: 221-3747 Date Assigned: May 2, 2014 Program Information Program Name Integrated Personnel and Pay System...Program Description The Integrated Personnel and Pay System-Army (IPPS-A) will provide the Army with an integrated, multi-Component (Active, National

  6. The 2017 MCWL/FD Initiative Portfolio

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-09-15

    maintaining compatibility with infantry weapon systems and human factors limitations. Non-Kinetic Engagement - Enable the rifle squad to disrupt enemy...provide robust, responsive, and accurate fires for distributed operations. Purpose: Determine weapons and equipment in order to provide organic fire... weapons , white trucks or other things of interest to the small unit. The system will identify the items and send alerts to the unit’s leader asking for

  7. Defense Intelligence: Additional Steps Could Better Integrate Intelligence Input into DODs Acquisition of Major Weapon Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-11-01

    DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE Additional Steps Could Better Integrate Intelligence Input into DOD’s Acquisition of Major Weapon...States Government Accountability Office Highlights of GAO-17-10, a report to congressional committees November 2016 DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE ...Additional Steps Could Better Integrate Intelligence Input into DOD’s Acquisition of Major Weapon Systems What GAO Found The Department of Defense (DOD

  8. 77 FR 2278 - Intent To Grant an Exclusive License for a U.S. Army Owned Invention to Triumph Actuation Systems...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-01-17

    ... DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Department of the Army Intent To Grant an Exclusive License for a U.S. Army Owned Invention to Triumph Actuation Systems--CT, LLC AGENCY: Department of the Army, DoD. ACTION: Notice. SUMMARY: The Department of the Army announces that, unless there is objection, after 15 days it...

  9. Assessment of the Combat Developer’s Role in Post-Deployment Software Support (PDSS) 30 June 1980 - 28 February 1981. Volume IV.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-01-31

    Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM), the US Army Communications Command (USACC), and the US Army Computer Systems Command (USACSC). (3...responsibilities of the US-Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM), the US Army Communications Command (USACC), and the US Army Computer Systems...necessary to sustain, modify, and improve a deployed system’s computer software, as defined by the User or his representative. It includes evaluation

  10. Sandia National Laboratories: National Security Missions: International

    Science.gov Websites

    Prevention History 60 impacts Diversity Locations Facts & Figures Programs Nuclear Weapons About Nuclear Weapons Safety & Security Weapons Science & Technology Defense Systems & Assessments About Directed Research & Development Technology Deployment Centers Working With Sandia Working With Sandia

  11. 75 FR 21264 - Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-04-23

    ... Defense. A0030-22 AMC System name: Army Food Management Information System Records System location.... 9397, as amended. Purpose(s): The Army Food Management Information System will be used to automate the...: Supervisor, Army Food Management Information System, Program Manager, 401 First Street, Suite 157, Fort Lee...

  12. 50 kW laser weapon demonstrator of Rheinmetall Waffe munition

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ludewigt, K.; Riesbeck, Th.; Graf, A.; Jung, M.

    2013-10-01

    We will present the setup of a 50 kW Laser Weapon Demonstrator (LWD) and results achieved with this system. The LWD is a ground based Air Defence system consisting of a Skyguard sensor unit for target acquisition and two laser equipped weapon turrets. The weapon turrets used are standard air defence turrets of Rheinmetall Air Defence which were equipped with several 10 kW Laser Weapon Modules (LWM). Each LWM consists of one 10 kW fiber laser and a beam forming unit (BFU). Commercial of the shelf fiber laser were modified for our defence applications. The BFU providing diffraction limited beam focusing, target imaging and fine tracking of the target was developed. The LWD was tested in a firing campaign at Rheinmetall test ground in Switzerland. All laser beams of both weapon turrets were superimposed on stationary and dynamic targets. Test results of the LWD for the scenarios Air Defence and C-RAMM (counter rockets, artillery, mortar and missiles) will be presented. An outlook for the next development stage towards a 100 kW class laser weapon on RWM will be given.

  13. [Prospects in getting accordance between chemical analytic control means and medical technical requirements to safety system concerning chemical weapons destruction].

    PubMed

    Rembovskiĭ, V R; Mogilenkova, L A; Savel'eva, E I

    2005-01-01

    The major unit monitoring chemical weapons destruction objects is a system of chemical analyticcontrol over the technologic process procedures and possibility of environment and workplace pollution withtoxicchemicals and their destruction products. At the same time, physical and chemical control means meet sanitary and hygienic requirements incompletely. To provide efficient control, internationally recognized approaches should be adapted to features of Russian system monitoring pollution of chemical weapons destruction objects with toxic chemicals.

  14. An Analysis of Tank Gap in Military Balance between Republic of Korea and North Korea

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-12-01

    designation *1100-3B CD850-6 CD850-6A Type hydrokinetic crossdrive No. of gears (forward/reverse) 4/2 2/2 2/1 Steering system hydrostatic crossdrive hydro...increased the number of bombers supplied to NK, and by 1956 they had introduced a new aircraft weapon system , the MIG-17 fighters. The agreement stood...U.S. inventories. Additionally, these arms were single weapons (as opposed to weapons systems ) which required only minimal mainte- nance and limited

  15. Choosing a Global Positioning System Device for Use in U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Regulatory Districts

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-12-01

    Information Systems Center of Expertise (RS/GIS CX) (CEERD-RZR), U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center, Cold Regions Research and...GIS Geographic Information Systems GPS Global Positioning System HH Handheld IWR U.S. Army Engineer Institute for Water Resources n/a Not...Applicable NAE U.S. Army New England Regulatory District RS/GIS Remote Sensing/Geographic Information Systems SD Secure Digital SDHC Secure Digital High

  16. [Consequences for military medicine of new nuclear weapons developments].

    PubMed

    Vogler, H

    1985-01-15

    The development and production of qualitatively new nuclear weapons (e.g. neutron weapons) has consequences also for the medical protection under conditions of war. In the present paper the peculiarities of these new systems of arms as well as the profile of injured persons which is to be expected after use of neutron weapons are analysed and general conclusions for the medical service are drawn.

  17. Reduction of Decision-Making Time in the Air Defense Management

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-06-01

    Cohen, Freeman, & Thompson, 1997), “Threat Evaluation and Weapon Allocation” ( Turan , 2012) and Evaluating the Performance of TEWA Systems (Fredrik...uses these threat values to propose weapon allocation ( Turan , 2012). Turan studied only static based weapon-target allocation. She evaluates and... Turan : - Proximity parameters (CPA, Time to CPA, CPA in units of time, time before hit, distance), - Capability parameters (target type, weapon

  18. Financial Management: Financial Reporting of Deferred Maintenance Information on Navy Weapon Systems for FY 2002

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2003-03-06

    Financial Management March 6, 2003 Office of the Inspector General of the Department of Defense Financial Reporting of Deferred Maintenance...N/A Dates Covered (from... to) - Title and Subtitle Financial Management: Financial Reporting of Deferred Maintenance Information on Navy Weapon...Project No. D2001FJ-0156.000) Financial Reporting of Deferred Maintenance Information on Navy Weapon Systems for FY 2002 Executive Summary Who

  19. Large Bilateral Reductions in Superpower Nuclear Weapons.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-07-01

    missile ( ABM ) systems were deployed, e.g., the current Soviet ABM system around Moscow. Although there have been no further wartime uses of nuclear...have placed more emphasis on strategic defense than the U.S.; however, by agreeing to the ABM Treaty, the 6Soviets implicitly accepted the fundamental...required for the reliability testing of existing nuclear weapons and the development of future nuclear weapons. The ABM Treaty of 1972 was a

  20. The Effectiveness of Concurrent Design on the Cost and Schedule Performance of Defense Weapons System Acquisitions

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Robertson, Randolph B.

    This study investigates the impact of concurrent design on the cost growth and schedule growth of US Department of Defense Major Defense Acquisition Systems (MDAPs). It is motivated by the question of whether employment of concurrent design in the development of a major weapon system will produce better results in terms of cost and schedule than traditional serial development methods. Selected Acquisition Reports were used to determine the cost and schedule growth of MDAPs as well as the degree of concurrency employed. Two simple linear regression analyses were used to determine the degree to which cost growth and schedule growth vary with concurrency. The results were somewhat surprising in that for major weapon systems the utilization of concurrency as it was implemented in the programs under study was shown to have no effect on cost performance, and that performance to development schedule, one of the purported benefits of concurrency, was actually shown to deteriorate with increases in concurrency. These results, while not an indictment of the concept of concurrency, indicate that better practices and methods are needed in the implementation of concurrency in major weapon systems. The findings are instructive to stakeholders in the weapons acquisition process in their consideration of whether and how to employ concurrent design strategies in their planning of new weapons acquisition programs.

  1. The Navy's high-energy laser weapon system

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Cook, Joung R.; Albertine, John R.

    1997-05-01

    Over the past 25 years, in an attempt to develop a speed-of- light hard-kill weapon system, the U.S. Navy has successfully reduced megawatt-class chemical laser and high power beam control technologies to engineering practice. This Navy program was established during the cold war era when defending naval battle group was the primary concern of the U.S. Navy. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, however, an urgent and challenging issue facing the U.S. Navy is the self-defense against cruise missile in a littoral battlefield environment against threats originating from shore and/or scattered low- value platforms. This fundamental shift in the battlefield environment and engagement configuration profoundly affected the basic performance requirements placed on potential shipboard high energy laser weapon systems (HELWS). In a littoral maritime environment, thermal blooming limits atmospheric propagation of an HEL beam, and thus limits the weapon's effectiveness. This paper identifies and discusses the technical issues associated with HELWS requirements in this new environment. It also discuses the collateral capabilities that enhance and complement the performance of other weapon and sensor systems onboard ship. This paper concludes that the HELWS using a free electron laser (FEL) offers a unique weapon option for our warships in facing the new defense challenges of the future.

  2. Determination of mustard and lewisite related compounds in abandoned chemical weapons (Yellow shells) from sources in China and Japan.

    PubMed

    Hanaoka, Shigeyuki; Nomura, Koji; Wada, Takeharu

    2006-01-06

    Knowledge of the states of the contents in chemical munitions that Japanese Imperial Forces abandoned at the end of World War II in Japan and China is gravely lacking. To unearth and recover these chemical weapons and detoxify the contents safely, it is essential to establish analytical procedures to definitely determine the CWA contents. We established such a procedure and applied it to the analysis of chemicals in the abandoned shells. Yellow shells are known to contain sulfur mustard, lewisite, or a mixture of both. Lewisite was analyzed without thiol derivatization, because it and its decomposition products yield the same substances in the derivatization. Analysis using our new procedure showed that both mustard and lewisite remained as the major components after the long abandonment of nearly 60 years. The content of mustard was 43% and that of lewisite 55%. The viscous material found was suggested to be mostly oligomers of mustard. Comparison of the components in the Yellow agents with mustard recovered in both Japan and China showed a difference in the impurities between the CWAs produced by the former Imperial navy and those by the former Imperial army.

  3. Patient care in a biological safety level-4 (BSL-4) environment.

    PubMed

    Marklund, LeRoy A

    2003-06-01

    The greatest threats to America's public health include accidental importation of deadly diseases by international travelers and the release of biologic weapons by our adversaries. The greatest failure is unpreparedness because international travel and dispersion of biologic agents by our enemies are inevitable. An effective medical defense program is the recommended deterrent against these threats. The United States has a federal response plan in place that includes patient care and patient transport by using the highest level of biologic containment: BSL-4. The DoD has the capability to provide intensive care for victims infected with highly infectious yet unknown biologic agents in an environment that protects the caregiver while allowing scientists to study the characteristics of these new agents and assess the effectiveness of treatment. Army critical care nurses are vital in the biologic medical defense against unidentified infectious diseases, accidental occupational exposures, or intentional dispersion of weaponized biologic agents. Research that carefully advances healthcare using BSL-4 technology addresses the challenges of the human element of BSL-4 containment patient care, and BSL-4 patient transport enhances our nation's ability to address the emerging biologic threats we confront in the future.

  4. An Overview of Human Figure Modeling for Army Aviation Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-04-01

    An Overview of Human Figure Modeling for Army Aviation Systems by Jamison S. Hicks, David B. Durbin, and Richard W. Kozycki ARL-TR-5154...April 2010 An Overview of Human Figure Modeling for Army Aviation Systems Jamison S. Hicks, David B. Durbin, and Richard W. Kozycki...TYPE Final 3. DATES COVERED (From - To) May 2009–August 2009 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE An Overview of Human Figure Modeling for Army Aviation Systems

  5. Emergence of solid state helmet-mounted displays in military applications

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Casey, Curtis J.

    2002-08-01

    Helmet Mounted Displays (HMDs) are used to provide pilots with out-the-window capabilities for engaging tactical threats. The first modern system to be employed was the Apache Integrated Helmet Display Sighting System (IHADSS). Using an optical tracker and multiple sensors, the pilot is able to navigate and engage the enemy with his weapons systems cued by the HMD in day and night conditions. Over the next several years HMDs were tested on tactical jet aircraft. The tactical fighter environment - high G maneuvering and the possibility of ejection - created several problems regarding integration and head-borne weight. However, these problems were soon solved by American, British, Israeli, and Russian companies and are employed or in the process of employment aboard the respective countries' tactical aircraft. It is noteworthy that the current configuration employs both the Heads-Up Display (HUD) as well as the HMD. The new Joint Strike Fighter (JSF), however, will become the first tactical jet to employ only a HMD. HMDs have increasingly become part of the avionics and weapons systems of new aircraft and helicopter platforms. Their use however, is migrating to other military applications. They are currently under evaluation on Combat Vehicle platforms for driving tasks to target acquisition and designation tasks under near-all weather, 24-hour conditions. Their use also has penetrated the individual application such as providing data and situational awareness to the individual soldier; the U.S. Army's Land Warrior Program is an example of this technology being applied. Current HMD systems are CRT-based and have many short-comings, including weight, reliability. The emergence of new microelectronics and solid state image sources - Flat Panel Displays (FPDs) - however, has expanded the application of vision devices across all facets of military applications. Some of the greatest contributions are derived from the following Enabling Technologies, and it is upon those technologies and their applications to HMDs that this paper will address: ¸ Active Matrix Liquid Crystal Displays; improved response times, compensation films ¸ Sub-micron electronics ¸ Backlight Technology to address brightness issues across the spectrum of operations ¸ Distortion Correction to compensate for optical aberrations in near-real time.

  6. 78 FR 31909 - Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-05-28

    ... (703) 428-6185. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Department of the Army systems of records notices...; System of Records AGENCY: Department of the Army, DoD. ACTION: Notice to delete two Systems of Records. SUMMARY: The Department of the Army is deleting two systems of records notices in its existing inventory...

  7. Research on Computer Aided Innovation Model of Weapon Equipment Requirement Demonstration

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Li, Yong; Guo, Qisheng; Wang, Rui; Li, Liang

    Firstly, in order to overcome the shortcoming of using only AD or TRIZ solely, and solve the problems currently existed in weapon equipment requirement demonstration, the paper construct the method system of weapon equipment requirement demonstration combining QFD, AD, TRIZ, FA. Then, we construct a CAI model frame of weapon equipment requirement demonstration, which include requirement decomposed model, requirement mapping model and requirement plan optimization model. Finally, we construct the computer aided innovation model of weapon equipment requirement demonstration, and developed CAI software of equipment requirement demonstration.

  8. Integrating Bill of Materials Data Into the Armys Enterprise Resource Planning Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-05-17

    management with a concentration in human resources from Virginia State University and an MBA from Averett University, and he is a public policy...57 Army Sustainment November–December 2015 As the Army moves to an en-terprise resource planning... Resource Planning Systems  By LeQuan M. Hylton TOOLS The fielding of Global Combat Support System–Army has changed the way the Army manages bill

  9. Knowledge attainment, perceptions, and professionalism in participants completing the didactic phase of an Army reserve critical care nursing residency program.

    PubMed

    Wynd, C A; Gotschall, W

    2000-04-01

    Combat hospitals in today's Army demand nurses with critical care nursing "8A" additional skills identifiers. The intensity of future wars and operations other than war, together with highly technological weapons, forecast a large number of casualties evacuated rapidly from combat with wounds that require skillful and intensive nursing care. Many of the critical care nurses providing future care are positioned in the reserve components and require creative approaches to education and training concentrated into one weekend per month. An Army Reserve critical care nursing residency program was designed in one midwestern combat support hospital. The didactic course, phase I, was evaluated for effectiveness in achieving outcomes of increased knowledge attainment, enhanced perceptions of critical care nursing, and higher degrees of professionalism. Twenty-seven registered nurses completed the course, and 30 nurses from the same hospital served as controls. A repeated-measures analysis examined outcomes before intervention (time 1), at course completion (time 2), and at a 6-month follow-up (time 3). The course was effective at increasing scores on knowledge attainment and perceptions of critical care nursing; however; professionalism scores were initially high and remained so throughout the study. This research extends information about critical care nursing education and evaluates a training mechanism for meeting the unique requirements and time constraints of nurses in the reserve components who need to provide a high level of skill to soldiers in combat.

  10. Space Law and Weapons in Space

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mosteshar, Sa'id

    2017-07-01

    Although legal principles to govern space were discussed as early as the mid-1950s, they were not formalized until the Outer Space Treaty (OST) of 1967 was adopted and came into force. The Outer Space Treaty establishes a number of principles affecting the placement of weapons in outer space. In particular, it provides for the peaceful use of earth's moon along with other celestial bodies and prohibits the testing of any types of weapons on such bodies. More generally the OST forbids the placement of nuclear weapons or other weapons of mass destruction in outer space. In addition, there are a number of disarmament treaties and agreements emanating from the UN Office for Disarmament Affairs and the Conference on Disarmament that are relevant to weapons in space. One of the fundamental question that arises is what constitutes a weapon and does its placement in space breach the requirement that outer space be used exclusively for peaceful purposes. For example, does a satellite used to control and direct an armed drone breach the peaceful use provision of the OST? There may be risks that without international norms governments and sub-state groups may acquire and use armed drones in ways that threaten regional stability, laws of war, and the role of domestic rule of law in decisions to use force. The nature of weapons and other questions of laws affecting the placement of weapons in space, as well as the use of space assets for non-peaceful purposes, are thus of real significance when considering space law and weapons in space. Examining the characteristics that render a space object a weapon and the role of intent and perception in the issues that arise become essential aspects to consider. This also necessitates examining dual-use systems common to many space systems and operations.

  11. Warrant Officer Orientation Course (WOOC) Evaluation

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-10-01

    Army Mainte- nance Management System, Security Awareness, Organizational Effectiveness, Introduction to Management , Enlisted Personnel Management...Orientation Introduction to Management Professional Ethics USA Officer Evaluation Reporting System (OES) Military Correspondence Military...Organizational Effectiveness, Introduction to Management , Enlisted Personnal Management System, and The Army Functional Files System and The Army

  12. Product Definition Data (PDD) Current Environment Report

    DOT National Transportation Integrated Search

    1989-05-01

    The objective of the Air Force Computer-aided Acquisition and Logistics Support (CALS) Program is to improve weapon system reliability, supportability and maintainability, and to reduce the cost of weapon system acquisition and logistics support. As ...

  13. U.S. Army unmanned aircraft systems roadmap 2010-2035

    DOT National Transportation Integrated Search

    2010-01-01

    The Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) Roadmap outlines how the U.S. Army will develop, organize, and employ UAS from 2010 to 2035 across full spectrum operations. The Army UAS Roadmap is nested with the Unmanned Systems (UMS) Initial Capabilities Docume...

  14. DEMONSTRATION BULLETIN: SITE CHARACTERIZATION ANALYSIS PENETROMETER SYSTEM (SCAPS) LIF SENSOR - U.S. ARMY, NAVY, AND AIR FORCE (TRI-SERVICES)

    EPA Science Inventory

    The Tri-Services Site Characterization Analysis Penetrometer System (SCAPS) was developed by the U.S. Army (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station [WES] and the Army Environmental Center [AEC]), Navy (Naval Command, Control and Ocean Surveillance Center), and ...

  15. Managing U.S. Air Force Aircraft Operating and Support Costs: Insights from Recent RAND Analysis and Opportunities for the Future

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-01-01

    operating and support (O&S) cost growth: Fuel costs drove 31 percent of overall O&S cost growth, unit-level personnel costs 30 percent, weapon system ...hours. • The root causes of weapon system sustainment costs are war-related effects and aging effects; while the former will diminish with the end of...the cost growth experienced for these large and costly fleets, with a particular focus on weapon system sustainment (WSS) costs.2 We focused on WSS

  16. Open-area concealed-weapon detection system

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Pati, P.; Mather, P.

    2011-06-01

    Concealed Weapon Detection (CWD) has become a significant challenge to present day security needs; individuals carrying weapons into airplanes, schools, and secured establishments are threat to public security. Although controlled screening, of people for concealed weapons, has been employed in many establishments, procedures and equipment are designed to work in restricted environments like airport passport control, military checkpoints, hospitals, school and university entrance. Furthermore, screening systems do not effectively decipher between threat and non-threat metal objects, thus leading to high rate of false alarms which can become a liability to daily operational needs of establishments. Therefore, the design and development of a new CWD system to operate in a large open area environment with large numbers of people reduced incidences of false alarms and increased location accuracy is essential.

  17. Red China’s Capitalist Bomb: Inside the Chinese Neutron Bomb Program

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-01-01

    developed an enhanced radiation weapon (ERW) but did not deploy it. ERWs, better known as “ neutron bombs,” are specialized nuclear weapons with...contemporary systems of concern. An ERW is a specialized nuclear weapon optimized to produce prompt radiation. Such a device emits neutrons with high...Council stated that China mastered “in succession the neutron bomb design technology and the nuclear weapon miniaturization technology.”10 This statement

  18. Biomechanical and performance implications of weapon design: comparison of bullpup and conventional configurations.

    PubMed

    Stone, Richard T; Moeller, Brandon F; Mayer, Robert R; Rosenquist, Bryce; Van Ryswyk, Darin; Eichorn, Drew

    2014-06-01

    Shooter accuracy and stability were monitored while firing two bullpup and two conventional configuration rifles of the same caliber in order to determine if one style of weapon results in superior performance. Considerable debate exists among police and military professionals regarding the differences between conventional configuration weapons, where the magazine and action are located ahead of the trigger, and bullpup configuration, where they are located behind the trigger (closer to the user). To date, no published research has attempted to evaluate this question from a physical ergonomics standpoint, and the knowledge that one style might improve stability or result in superior performance is of interest to countless military, law enforcement, and industry experts. A live-fire evaluation of both weapon styles was performed using a total of 48 participants. Shooting accuracy and fluctuations in biomechanical stability (center of pressure) were monitored while subjects used the weapons to perform standard drills. The bullpup weapon designs were found to provide a significant advantage in accuracy and shooter stability, while subjects showed considerable preference toward the conventional weapons. Although many mechanical and maintenance issues must be considered before committing to a bullpup or conventional weapon system, it is clear in terms of basic human stability that the bullpup is the more advantageous configuration. Results can be used by competitive shooter, military, law enforcement, and industry experts while outfitting personnel with a weapon system that leads to superior performance.

  19. Sandia Research and Development Board: Minutes of the 33rd Meeting

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Castle, M.

    1950-02-08

    Notes about the barometric fuzing system testing, drops of stockpile weapons requested by the Strategic Air Command, simultaneous drops and the interaction of the baro systems, changes of desired military characteristics of atomic weapons.

  20. Reagan and the Nuclear Freeze: "Stars Wars" as a Rhetorical Strategy.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Bjork, Rebecca S.

    1988-01-01

    Analyzes the interaction between nuclear freeze activists and proponents of a Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). Argues that SDI strengthens Reagan's rhetorical position concerning nuclear weapons policy because it reduces the argumentative ground of the freeze movement by envisioning a defensive weapons system that would nullify nuclear weapons.…

  1. Physical Security Modeling for the Shipboard Nuclear Weapons Security Program,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-04-01

    I AOA1IR 396 NAVAL SURFACE WEAPONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MO F/G 15/3 PHYSICAL SECURITY MODELING FOR THE SHIPROARD NUCLEAR WEAPONS SE--ETEEU) APR A2 E ...WEAPONS SECURITY )PROGRAM 0% BY E . G. JACOUES D. L BARTUSEK R. W. MONROE M. S. SCHWARTZ WEAPONS SYSTEMS DEPARTMENT 1 APRIL 1982 A4pm lvW for p uic r...ASSIPICATIO N O F Tb IS PAGE t’W "mu Dat e E DLeT R)....... t READ W~STRUCTIoNs’ REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE BEFORE COMPLETNG FORM4 . REPiQRT NUM1e[i ja. VT

  2. Heterogeneous Defensive Naval Weapon Assignment To Swarming Threats In Real Time

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-03-01

    threat Damage potential of target t if it hits the ship [integer from 0 to 3] _ ttarget phit Probability that target t hits the ship [probability...secondary weapon systems on target t [integer] _ tsec phit Probability that secondary weapon systems launched from target t hit the ship...pairing. These parameters are calculated as follows: 310 _ _t t tpriority target threat target phit = × × (3.1) 3_ 10 _ _t t tsec priority sec

  3. 32 CFR Appendix A to Part 584 - Reference

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-07-01

    ... Certain Other Units of the Army. AR 340-18 The Army Functional Files System AR 600-240 Marriage in Oversea...-17 Release of Information and Records from Army Files. (Cited in § 584.1(f)(2).) AR 340-21 The Army... regulation. AR 11-2 Internal Control Systems AR 20-1 Inspector General Activities and Procedures AR 140-1...

  4. 32 CFR Appendix A to Part 584 - Reference

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ... Certain Other Units of the Army. AR 340-18 The Army Functional Files System AR 600-240 Marriage in Oversea...-17 Release of Information and Records from Army Files. (Cited in § 584.1(f)(2).) AR 340-21 The Army... regulation. AR 11-2 Internal Control Systems AR 20-1 Inspector General Activities and Procedures AR 140-1...

  5. 32 CFR Appendix A to Part 584 - Reference

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... Certain Other Units of the Army. AR 340-18 The Army Functional Files System AR 600-240 Marriage in Oversea...-17 Release of Information and Records from Army Files. (Cited in § 584.1(f)(2).) AR 340-21 The Army... regulation. AR 11-2 Internal Control Systems AR 20-1 Inspector General Activities and Procedures AR 140-1...

  6. 32 CFR Appendix A to Part 584 - Reference

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-07-01

    ... Certain Other Units of the Army. AR 340-18 The Army Functional Files System AR 600-240 Marriage in Oversea...-17 Release of Information and Records from Army Files. (Cited in § 584.1(f)(2).) AR 340-21 The Army... regulation. AR 11-2 Internal Control Systems AR 20-1 Inspector General Activities and Procedures AR 140-1...

  7. Drone Defense System Architecture for U.S. Navy Strategic Facilities

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-09-01

    evaluation and weapons assignment (TEWA) to properly address threats. This report follows a systems engineering process to develop a software architecture...C-UAS requires a central system to connect these new and existing systems. The central system uses data fusion and threat evaluation and weapons...30  Table 6.  Decision Type Descriptions .......................................................................40  Table 7

  8. Lead exposures and biological responses in military weapons systems: Aerosol characteristics and acute lead effects among US Army artillerymen: Final report

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Bhattacharyya, M.H.; Stebbings, J.H.; Peterson, D.P.

    1993-03-01

    This study was to determine the concentration and chemical nature of lead (Pb) aerosols produced during the firing of artillery and to determine the exposures and biological responses of crew members exposed to lead aerosols during such firing. The concentrations of lead-containing aerosols at crew positions depended on wind conditions, with higher concentrations when firing into a head wind. Aerosol concentrations were highest in the muzzle blast zone. Concentrations of lead in the blood of crew members rose during the first 12 days of exposure to elevated airborne lead concentrations and then leveled off. There was no rapid decrease inmore » blood lead concentrations after completion of firing. Small decreases in hematocrit and small increases in free erythrocyte porphyrin were correlated with increasing exposure to airborne lead. These changes were reversed by seven weeks after firing. Changes in nerve conduction velocity had borderline statistical significance to airborne lead exposure. In measuring nerve conduction velocity, differences in skin temperature must be taken into account.« less

  9. 75 FR 61453 - Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-10-05

    ... DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Department of the Army [Docket ID USA-2010-0021] Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records AGENCY: Department of the Army; DoD. ACTION: Notice to add a system of records. SUMMARY..., Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison Officer, Department of Defense. A0036-2 USAAA System Name: Army Audit...

  10. 76 FR 40343 - Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-07-08

    ... DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Department of the Army [Docket ID USA-2011-0017] Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records AGENCY: Department of the Army, DoD. ACTION: Notice to amend a system of records. SUMMARY: The Department of the Army is proposing to amend a system of records notice in its existing inventory...

  11. 77 FR 72336 - Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-12-05

    ... CFSC System name: Army Club Membership Files (June 21, 2001, 66 FR 33239). Reason: The records were..., Army Club Membership Files system of records notice can be deleted. Records have met the required... DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Department of the Army [Docket ID USA-2012-0016] Privacy Act of 1974; System...

  12. 78 FR 18570 - Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-03-27

    ... DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Department of the Army [Docket ID USA-2013-0004] Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records AGENCY: Department of the Army, DoD. ACTION: Notice to reinstate five systems of records. SUMMARY: The Department of the Army proposes to reinstate five systems of records to its inventory of...

  13. New Weapons and the Arms Race

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tsipis, Kosta

    1983-10-01

    In speaking about technologies that could further animate the weapons competition between the United States and the U.S.S.R., it would be useful to distinguish between technologies that have already been incorporated into specific weapons systems, and new technologies that are of a generic nature, can be used in a variety of applications, adn can best be described by the tasks that they can perform rather than any specific weapons application. Let me begin with the latter class.

  14. Field Artillery Cannon Weapons Systems and Ammunition Handbook.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-02-01

    ground. I (2) When the weapon is emplaced on uneven terrain, the equalizing support rotates on the horizontal pivot pin, placing the tilting parts of the...intervisible. g. Direct fire-Fire from a weapon that is laid by sighting directly on the target. h. Cant-The tilting of the trunnions of the weapon...locking handle bends or breaks because excess mucle is applied. The screws vibrate loose and are lost because somebody forgets to check them for

  15. Army Net Zero Prove Out. Army Net Zero Training Report

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-11-20

    existing reporting systems (e.g., Army Energy and Water Reporting System, Solid Waste Annual Reporting- web , Headquarters Army Environmental System). 3...Testing a wave energy converter  Harnesses the pressure of a wave on the ocean floor 22  Conduct thermal building envelope analysis  IR ...bathroom f ixtures, ai r handling units, Less than 3𔄃W i rrigat ion controls w ith EPA Water’Sense approved equipment 1% 0 . .279% Acqu ire lower water

  16. New approach for detecting and classifying concealed weapons

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Roybal, Lyle G.; Rice, Philip M.; Manhardt, Joseph M.

    1997-02-01

    The possession of a weapon in the courtroom of our American justice system is a Federal offense. A weapon in the courtroom is a particularly serious problem for judges, plaintiffs, defendants, and bystanders because of the emotional nature and environment of the courtroom. Potential violators include organized criminals and gangsters, individuals with personal vendettas, and otherwise sane and reasonable people who, because of the emotion of the moment, lose sight of right and wrong in our justice system. Most Federal courthouses incorporate some sort of metal detection apparatus used to screen and prevent individuals from carrying personal weapons into courtrooms. These devices are considered conventional in the sense that they employ an active electromagnetic induction technique that is sensitive to the presence of metal. This technique provides no information concerning the massiveness and location of the offending metal object and is prone to false alarms. This work introduces an alternative method for weapons discrimination that is based on passive magnetics technology in concert with simple comparative algorithms such that massiveness and location of suspected weapons may be determined. Since this system provides information not available from conventional metal detectors, false alarms will be greatly reduced, allowing remote monitoring of all entrances into a courtroom from a single vantage point, thereby saving considerable resources used on personnel costs.

  17. 75 FR 25159 - Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement; Preservation of Tooling for Major Defense...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-05-07

    ... Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009. Section 815 requires acquisition plans for major weapons systems to... hardware for major defense acquisition programs through the end of the service life of the related weapons... affects all contracts for major weapons that will require special tooling associated with the production...

  18. 78 FR 42584 - Additional Designation of Aluminat, Pars Amayesh Sanaat Kish, Parviz Khaki, Pishro Systems...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-07-16

    ... Order 13382, ``Blocking Property of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferators and Their Supporters... materially contributed to, or pose a risk of materially contributing to, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction or their means of delivery (including missiles capable of delivering such weapons), including any...

  19. Preventing lethal violence in schools: the case for entry-based weapons screening.

    PubMed

    Mawson, Anthony R; Lapsley, Peter M; Hoffman, Allan M; Guignard, John C

    2002-04-01

    Violence-related behavior in schools has declined in recent years, but the perception of risk remains high. Disturbingly high percentages of students and teachers report staying home out of fear, and many students bring weapons to school for protection. Current proposals for preventing school violence include punishing the violence-prone, expulsion for weapon carriers, and creating a culture of nonviolence through various behavioral methods like conflict resolution. None of these proposals address the issue of lethal violence and hence personal safety. The risk of lethal violence in schools (related mainly to firearms) could be substantially reduced by creating an effective barrier between firearms and people. This could be achieved by using entry-based weapons detection systems similar to those now used in airports and courts. Decreasing the risk and fear of violence by converting schools into weapons-free zones would also be expected to increase attendance and improve scholastic performance. Randomized, controlled studies should be undertaken to evaluate the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of entry-based weapons detection systems for achieving these outcomes.

  20. Measuring nursing essential contributions to quality patient care outcomes.

    PubMed

    Wolgast, Kelly A; Taylor, Katherine; Garcia, Dawn; Watkins, Miko

    2011-01-01

    Workload Management System for Nursing (WMSN) is a core Army Medical Department business system that has provided near real-time, comprehensive nursing workload and manpower data for decision making at all levels for over 25 years. The Army Manpower Requirements and Documentation Agency populates data from WMSN into the Manpower Staffing Standards System (Inpatient module within Automated Staffing Assessment Model). The current system, Workload Management System for Nursing Internet (WMSNi), is an interim solution that requires additional functionalities for modernization and integration at the enterprise level. The expanding missions and approved requirements for WMSNi support strategic initiatives on the Army Medical Command balanced scorecard and require continued sustainment for multiple personnel and manpower business processes for both inpatient and outpatient nursing care. This system is currently being leveraged by the TRICARE Management Activity as an interim multiservice solution, and is being used at 24 Army medical treatment facilities. The evidenced-based information provided to Army decision makers through the methods used in the WMSNi will be essential across the Army Medical Command throughout the system's life cycle.

  1. Occupational overpressure exposure of breachers and military personnel

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kamimori, G. H.; Reilly, L. A.; LaValle, C. R.; Olaghere Da Silva, U. B.

    2017-11-01

    Military and law enforcement personnel may be routinely and repetitively exposed to low-level blast (LLB) overpressure during training and in operations. This repeated exposure has been associated with symptoms similar to that reported for sports concussion. This study reports LLB exposure for various military and law enforcement sources in operational training environments. Peak overpressure and impulse data are presented from indoor breaching, outdoor breaching, shotgun door breaching, small arms discharge, and mortar and artillery fire missions. Data were collected using the Black Box Biometrics (B3) Blast Gauge sensors. In all cases, sensors were attached to the operators and, where possible, also statically mounted to walls or other fixed structures. Peak overpressures from below 1 psi (7 kPa) to over 12 psi (83 kPa) were recorded; all values reported are uncorrected for incidence angle to the blast exposure source. The results of these studies indicate that the current minimum safe distance calculations are often inaccurate for both indoor and outdoor breaching scenarios as true environmental exposure can consistently exceed the 4 psi (28 kPa) incident safe threshold prescribed by U.S. Army doctrine. While ballistic (shotgun) door breaching and small arms firing only expose the operator to low peak exposure levels, the sheer number of rounds fired during training may result in an excessive cumulative exposure. Mortar and artillery crew members received significantly different overpressure and impulse exposures based on their position (job) relative to the weapon. As both the artillery and mortar crews commonly fire hundreds of rounds during a single training session they are also likely to receive high cumulative exposures. These studies serve to provide the research community with estimates for typical operator exposure across a range of operational scenarios or in the discharge of various weapons systems.

  2. OSD CALS Architecture Master Plan Study. Concept Paper. Configuration Management. Volume 28

    DOT National Transportation Integrated Search

    1989-10-01

    The mission of CALS is to enhance operational readiness of DoD weapon systems through application of information technology to the management of technical information. CALS will automate the current paper-intensive processes involved in weapon system...

  3. System and method for disrupting suspect objects

    DOEpatents

    Gladwell, T. Scott; Garretson, Justin R; Hobart, Clinton G; Monda, Mark J

    2013-07-09

    A system and method for disrupting at least one component of a suspect object is provided. The system includes a source for passing radiation through the suspect object, a screen for receiving the radiation passing through the suspect object and generating at least one image therefrom, a weapon having a discharge deployable therefrom, and a targeting unit. The targeting unit displays the image(s) of the suspect object and aims the weapon at a disruption point on the displayed image such that the weapon may be positioned to deploy the discharge at the disruption point whereby the suspect object is disabled.

  4. TALON: a universal unmanned ground vehicle platform, enabling the mission to be the focus

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wells, Peter; Deguire, Dan

    2005-05-01

    Foster-Miller's unmanned ground vehicle, TALON, was originally developed under DARPA's Tactical Mobile Robotics (TMR) program. TALON has evolved over the years and has proven to be a robust, mobile, universal platform. As a result of the advances made in the evolution of TALON, new and far-reaching opportunities have been realized for unmanned ground vehicles. In recent conflicts such as in Afghanistan and Iraq, unmanned systems have played an important role and have extended the reach and capabilities of the War fighter. Technological advances have transformed unmanned vehicles in to useful tools and in some cases are used in lieu of sending in a soldier. Unmanned ground vehicles have seen recent and persistent success, as shown in theater, in the explosive ordinance disposal (EOD) and improvised ordinance disposal (IED) missions. Foster-Miller's TALON has experienced over ten thousand EOD and IED missions in Iraq alone. The success of the unmanned system has resulted in the doctrine "Send the robot in first". Foster-Miller has taken the role of the unmanned vehicle in yet another direction. Foster-Miller has transformed the TALON from a "practical" to "tactical" system. Through the combined efforts of Foster-Miller and the US Army, TALON has been involved in a weaponization program. To date, Foster-Miller has outfitted the TALON with 11 systems. As one can see, the unmanned ground vehicle is much more than a mobility platform.

  5. Acoustic Directivity Patterns for Army Weapons. Supplement 1

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-09-01

    12. GOVT ACCESSION NO, S. RECIPIENT’S CATALOG NUMW9M CERL- TR -N-60 A l 4_ 4. TITLE (and Subdti) S. TYPE OF REPORT & PERIOD COVERED ACOUSTIC DIRECTIVITY...5.4 36.1 124.9 -13-4 01.3 7032 119.2 -11.1 F kah 11816 19.3 IS. 16 1007 14179 17 3.MVUh.N 1963 -13.8 51.3 US66 135.3 -11.4 786& 76.1 136. -124 Imukm... ISO .$ sti.l 1342 -12.7 1116 16.7 131.5 113. 1816 111.8 9815L Is"I 22C- 154.2 .12.6 9611 90. 1511.4 -15.2 IW1 111.7 36.4 -ILU 146 91.7 366.5 lots5

  6. Software System Architecture Modeling Methodology for Naval Gun Weapon Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-12-01

    Weapon System HAR Hazard Action Report HERO Hazards of Electromagnetic Radiation to Ordnance IOC Initial Operational Capability... radiation to ordnance ; and combinations therein. Equipment, systems, or procedures and processes whose malfunction would hazard the safe manufacturing...NDI Non-Development Item OPEVAL Operational Evaluation ORDALTS Ordnance Alterations O&SHA Operating and Support Hazard Analysis PDA

  7. What Happens to Deterrence as Nuclear Weapons Decrease Toward Zero?

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Drell, Sidney

    2011-04-01

    Steps reducing reliance on deployed nuclear weapons en route to zero will be discussed. They include broadly enhancing cooperation and transparency agreements beyond the provisions for verifying limits on deployed strategic nuclear warheads and delivery systems in the New START treaty. Two questions that will be addressed are: What conditions would have to be established in order to maintain strategic stability among nations as nuclear weapons recede in importance? What would nuclear deterrence be like in a world without nuclear weapons?

  8. Naval Directed-Energy Weapons - No Longer a Future Weapon Concept

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-01-01

    DE efforts. High-Energy Laser Weapons HEL weapon systems have been envisioned for a great many years, to include be- ing referred to as Martian “Heat...PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR(S) 5d. PROJECT NUMBER 5e. TASK NUMBER 5f. WORK UNIT NUMBER 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES... ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER 9. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 10. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S ACRONYM(S) 11. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S REPORT NUMBER(S

  9. High-energy laser weapons: technology overview

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Perram, Glen P.; Marciniak, Michael A.; Goda, Matthew

    2004-09-01

    High energy laser (HEL) weapons are ready for some of today"s most challenging military applications. For example, the Airborne Laser (ABL) program is designed to defend against Theater Ballistic Missiles in a tactical war scenario. Similarly, the Tactical High Energy Laser (THEL) program is currently testing a laser to defend against rockets and other tactical weapons. The Space Based Laser (SBL), Advanced Tactical Laser (ATL) and Large Aircraft Infrared Countermeasures (LAIRCM) programs promise even greater applications for laser weapons. This technology overview addresses both strategic and tactical roles for HEL weapons on the modern battlefield and examines current technology limited performance of weapon systems components, including various laser device types, beam control systems, atmospheric propagation, and target lethality issues. The characteristics, history, basic hardware, and fundamental performance of chemical lasers, solid state lasers and free electron lasers are summarized and compared. The elements of beam control, including the primary aperture, fast steering mirror, deformable mirrors, wavefront sensors, beacons and illuminators will be discussed with an emphasis on typical and required performance parameters. The effects of diffraction, atmospheric absorption, scattering, turbulence and thermal blooming phenomenon on irradiance at the target are described. Finally, lethality criteria and measures of weapon effectiveness are addressed. The primary purpose of the presentation is to define terminology, establish key performance parameters, and summarize technology capabilities.

  10. Neurotoxic Weapons and Syndromes.

    PubMed

    Carota, Antonio; Calabrese, Pasquale; Bogousslavsky, Julien

    2016-01-01

    The modern era of chemical and biological warfare began in World War I with the large-scale production and use of blistering and choking agents (chlorine, phosgene and mustard gases) in the battlefield. International treaties (the 1925 Geneva Protocol, the 1975 Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention and the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention) banned biological and chemical weapons. However, several countries are probably still engaged in their development. Hence, there is risk of these weapons being used in the future. This chapter will focus on neurotoxic weapons (e.g. nerve agents, chemical and biological neurotoxins, psychostimulants), which act specifically or preeminently on the central nervous system and/or the neuromuscular junction. Deeply affecting the function of the nervous system, these agents either have incapacitating effects or cause clusters of casualties who manifest primary symptoms of encephalopathy, seizures, muscle paralysis and respiratory failure. The neurologist should be prepared both to notice patterns of symptoms and signs that are sufficiently consistent to raise the alarm of neurotoxic attacks and to define specific therapeutic interventions. Additionally, extensive knowledge on neurotoxic syndromes should stimulate scientific research to produce more effective antidotes and antibodies (which are still lacking for most neurotoxic weapons) for rapid administration in aerosolized forms in the case of terrorist or warfare scenarios. © 2016 S. Karger AG, Basel.

  11. The U.S. Army Laboratories at Watertown, Massachusetts. Contributions to Science and Technology: A History,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1995-08-01

    national center of excellence in structural materials research, as applied to Army systems . Its contributions to materials science and technology are...1970s. Watertown played a major role in applying S-2 glass, Kevlar and Spectra to Army systems . The desirable properties in a fiber for armor...of the latest technology which can be applied to Army systems , but also to guide the R&D and to stir the competitive juices of industry. More recent

  12. Igniting the Light Elements: The Los Alamos Thermonuclear Weapon Project, 1942-1952

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Fitzpatrick, Anne C.

    1999-07-01

    The American system of nuclear weapons research and development was conceived and developed not as a result of technological determinism, but by a number of individual architects who promoted the growth of this large technologically-based complex. While some of the technological artifacts of this system, such as the fission weapons used in World War II, have been the subject of many historical studies, their technical successors--fusion (or hydrogen) devices--are representative of the largely unstudied highly secret realms of nuclear weapons science and engineering. In the postwar period a small number of Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory's staff and affiliates were responsiblemore » for theoretical work on fusion weapons, yet the program was subject to both the provisions and constraints of the US Atomic Energy Commission, of which Los Alamos was a part. The Commission leadership's struggle to establish a mission for its network of laboratories, least of all to keep them operating, affected Los Alamos's leaders' decisions as to the course of weapons design and development projects. Adapting Thomas P. Hughes's ''large technological systems'' thesis, I focus on the technical, social, political, and human problems that nuclear weapons scientists faced while pursuing the thermonuclear project, demonstrating why the early American thermonuclear bomb project was an immensely complicated scientific and technological undertaking. I concentrate mainly on Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory's Theoretical, or T, Division, and its members' attempts to complete an accurate mathematical treatment of the ''Super''--the most difficult problem in physics in the postwar period--and other fusion weapon theories. Although tackling a theoretical problem, theoreticians had to address technical and engineering issues as well. I demonstrate the relative value and importance of H-bomb research over time in the postwar era to scientific, politician, and military participants in this project. I analyze how and when participants in the H-bomb project recognized both blatant and subtle problems facing the project, how scientists solved them, and the relationship this process had to official nuclear weapons policies. Consequently, I show how the practice of nuclear weapons science in the postwar period became an extremely complex, technologically-based endeavor.« less

  13. 22 CFR 129.7 - Prior approval (license).

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-04-01

    ...; (ii) Nuclear weapons strategic delivery systems and all components, parts, accessories, attachments specifically designed for such systems and associated equipment; (iii) Nuclear weapons design and test equipment of a nature described by Category XVI of Part 121; (iv) Naval nuclear propulsion equipment of a...

  14. 22 CFR 129.7 - Prior approval (license).

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-04-01

    ...; (ii) Nuclear weapons strategic delivery systems and all components, parts, accessories, attachments specifically designed for such systems and associated equipment; (iii) Nuclear weapons design and test equipment of a nature described by Category XVI of part 121; (iv) Naval nuclear propulsion equipment of a...

  15. Restructuring the Total Army School System. Documented Briefing.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Winkler, John D.

    With the eventual aim of developing a "Total Army School System," the U.S. Army requested an independent and objective assessment of the operation of the Reserve Component (RC) training system. The first portion of the analysis dealt with the extent to which RC Training Institutions (RCTI) were successful at meeting units' training…

  16. Ideal Directed-Energy System To Defeat Small Unmanned Aircraft System Swarms

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-05-21

    AIR COMMAND AND STAFF COLLEGE AIR UNIVERSITY IDEAL DIRECTED- ENERGY SYSTEM TO DEFEAT SMALL UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEM SWARMS by David F. Pina...directed energy (DE) developmental systems indicate this class of weapons is the best solution. A review of several continuous wave laser, pulsed high...powered microwave, and electronic warfare/jamming systems indicate the following attributes as ideal for a future directed energy weapon (DEW) system

  17. The Army’s Activities in Artificial Intelligence/Robotics,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-08-27

    r7 AD-,30 128 THE ARMY S ACT"IVITES AN ARTIFICIAL INTELLGENCE/ROBOT CS U) ARMY ENGINEER TOPOGRAPHIC LASS FORT RELVOIR VA R D LEIGHT 27 AUG 82 ETL-042...necessary for autonomous battlefield systems in the 1990’ s . The potential applications of AI/R systems to Army needs (’ appear to be limitless. DARCOM and...procurement. The contract statement or work had four tasks to be performed. They were: a. From Army concepts and doctrine for the 1990’ s and beyond, such as

  18. Robotic Laser Coating Removal System

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-07-01

    Materiel Command IRR Internal Rate of Return JTP Joint Test Protocol JTR Joint Test Report LARPS Large Area Robotic Paint Stripping LASER Light...use of laser paint stripping systems is applicable to depainting activities on large off-aircraft components and weapons systems for the Air Force...The use of laser paint stripping systems is applicable to depainting activities on large off-aircraft components and weapons systems for the Air

  19. Lipophilic super-absorbent swelling gels as cleaners for use on weapons systems and platforms

    USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database

    Increasingly stringent environmental regulations on volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) demand the development of disruptive technologies for cleaning weapons systems and platforms. Currently employed techniques such as vapor degreasing, solvent, aqueous, or blast c...

  20. The Development of a Model for Construction of Criterion Referenced System Achievement Tests for the Strategic Weapon System Training Program.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Cantor, Jeffrey A.; Hobson, Edward N.

    The development of a test design methodology used to construct a criterion-referenced System Achievement Test (CR-SAT) for selected Naval enlisted classification (NEC) in the Strategic Weapon System (SWS) of the United States Navy is described. Subject matter experts, training data analysts and educational specialists developed a comprehensive…

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