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http://www.sptimes.com/2004/07/13/Business/USF_sonar_guards_GOP_.shtml
USF sonar guards GOP convention
St. Petersburg Times
The system will monitor the water around Manhattan during the national
convention next month.

By ROBERT TRIGAUX, Times Business Columnist
Published July 13, 2004

ST. PETERSBURG - What does a plastic Christmas tree stand from Kmart have to
do with the Republican National Convention?

Well, finding the first helped earn some Tampa Bay scientists a big ticket
to the second.

Researchers at the University of South Florida's Center for Ocean Technology
in St. Petersburg hid a round Christmas tree stand underwater not far off
the campus seawall to test the ability of its cutting-edge sonar system to
find it.

The tree stand is about the same size and shape as a limpet mine, a common
type of underwater bomb that is magnetically attached to its target.

The sonar system did its job. Next month in New York City, the stakes will
be higher.

To help deter terrorist plots, the U.S. Coast Guard recently chose the
high-tech sonar system to monitor the ports, piers, seawalls and hulls of
ships around Manhattan during the Republican National Convention in late
August.

The convention job is a big step for USF, which has embraced an aggressive
strategy to become a major university player in the world of antiterrorism
security. Should its 3-D sonar deliver what it promises at the Republican
convention, look for it at the 2005 Super Bowl in Jacksonville. The city
lacks the hotel rooms to meet the Super Bowl's demands, so it has arranged
for cruise ships at port to serve as hotels. Hence the added need for
underwater security.

USF's sonar system creates high-resolution, three-dimensional color pictures
and will allow the Coast Guard to scan below the waterline for any
suspicious objects. That will be critical in the murky waters surrounding
Manhattan during the Republican convention.

"We're not restricted by dark waters," said Scot T. Tripp, an engineer with
the Coast Guard's Research & Development Center for Ocean Technology in
Groton, Conn. The Coast Guard, along with the U.S. Secret Service, will
coordinate the USF system as part of a major effort to protect the
Republican gathering from Aug. 30 to Sept. 2.

And what about the Democratic National Convention? Scheduled to begin in
just 13 days in Boston, it will take place too soon to benefit from the USF
sonar system, Tripp said. But the Coast Guard will use a range of other,
conventional sonar scans to protect the Boston harbor.

Last week, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge warned that al-Qaida
might attack America "in an effort to disrupt the democratic process."
Though Ridge offered no specific information, both the Democratic and
Republican conventions are considered prime targets.

About 50,000 convention attendees are expected to show up in New York, along
with 500,000 or more protesters.

In the short term, the goal of USF's Center for Ocean Technology is to find
more military and homeland security applications - and to tap their
currently lucrative funding - for its emerging security projects.

In the long run, the center hopes to commercialize a variety of
security-related systems.

"Ultimately, the Coast Guard is not interested in a single sensor, but
rather a complete and mature scanning system," said John Kloske, director of
operations at USF's Center for Ocean Technology. "That's the real
challenge - delivering a tool that 19- or 20-year-old sailors can use."

Kloske will accompany the center's 3-D sonar system to the Republican
National Convention and be on call should the Coast Guard require any
assistance with the device.

The Center of Ocean Technology already is in early talks with ports in
California and elsewhere about using its sonar system. The center sees the
rapidly growing cruise ship industry as another market likely to embrace a
product to improve the safety of its passengers.

The USF Center, along with St. Petersburg College, also recently formed a
consortium to convince the federal government to establish a "national
center for maritime and port security" in St. Petersburg. That effort is in
the early stages, said Carol Steele, the center's business development
manager.

The current 3-D sonar system emerged from an earlier USF project, the Robot.
Designed during the Persian Gulf War, that system helped the U.S. Navy scan
ocean bottoms for mines before landing soldiers on shore. Later development
of the 0,000 sonar system was driven by federal interest in scanning the
hulls of ships for places to hide guns or drugs.

That all changed after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. With the
federal government's heightened interest in national security, USF's center
upgraded its system to scan a wider range of underwater surfaces.

Development of USF's 3-D sonar system was funded by Office of Naval Research
grants of nearly -million annually. The Coast Guard's Tripp said his
organization recently added new funding to accelerate the 3-D sonar system
into "an operational tool."

Overall, USF ranks among the highest federally funded universities in the
nation for antiterrorism. Between USF's Center for Ocean Technology in St.
Petersburg and its four-year-old Center for Biological Defense in Tampa, the
university has received more than -million from the U.S. Department of
Defense and other branches of the military in the past academic year for
antiterrorism projects.

In addition, USF's Center for Ocean Technology in late 2002 opened one of
the largest microelectromechanical systems, or MEMS, research and
development centers in the southeast at the Young-Rainey STAR Center in
Largo. MEMS involves the miniatured manufacturing of devices for medical,
aerospace and military purposes.

USF's Largo facility was funded by a .2-million grant from the U.S. Army's
Space and Missile Defense Command.

In antiterrorism funding, USF is tapping a deep well but also facing fierce
competition. The federal government has committed billions of federal
dollars to finance homeland defense and new security projects. But the feds
want efficient, high-quality results as quickly as possible.

How it works
The University of South Florida's underwater sonar system will be attached
to the side of a small Coast Guard boat that can cruise at up to five knots
along New York's piers and ships. Using acoustic sonar, the system will take
color pictures of surfaces beneath the water and send the images to a
central control center.

The 3-D images can then be turned and evaluated by computer from any angle.
And the pictures are "geo-referenced" so that specific images can be
pinpointed to precise locations.

The system is expected to be used repeatedly during the convention so that
images of the same underwater locations can be compared over time for any
differences.

At the least, the 3-D system will help monitor large underwater areas, and
allow the Coast Guard to optimize its use of slower-moving divers in any
search efforts.





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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substanceâ??not soap-boxingâ??please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'â??with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright fraudsâ??is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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