United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Naval Research Laboratory

Emblem of the NRL
Active 1923--present
Country United States
Branch Navy
Type Research and development
Size 2,328 civilian
85 military (2012)
Part of Office of Naval Research
Commanders
Commander CAPT Anthony Ferrari
Director of Research Dr. John A. Montgomery

The United States Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) is the corporate research laboratory for the United States Navy and the United States Marine Corps and conducts a wide range of basic scientific research, applied research, technological development and prototyping. A few of the laboratory's current specialties include plasma physics, space physics, materials science, and tactical electronic warfare. NRL is is one of the first US Government scientific R&D laboratories, having opened in 1923 at the instigation of Thomas Edison, and is currently under the Office of Naval Research.[1] NRL's research expenditures are approximately $1.1 billion per year.[2]

Research

The Naval Research Laboratory conducts a wide variety of basic and scientific research and technological development of importance to the Navy. It has a long history of scientific breakthroughs and technological achievements dating back to its foundation in 1923.[3] In 2011, NRL researchers published 1,398 unclassified scientific & technical articles, book chapters and conference proceedings.[2] In 2008, the NRL was ranked #3 among all U.S. institutions holding nanotechnology-related patents, behind IBM and the University of California.[4]

Current areas of research at NRL include:[2]

  • Advanced Radio, Optical and IR Sensors
  • Autonomous Systems
  • Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence
  • Directed Energy Technology
  • Electronic Electro-optical Device Technology
  • Electronic Warfare
  • Enhanced Maintainability, Reliability and Survivability Technology
  • Environmental Effects on Naval Systems
  • Imaging Research and Systems
  • Information Technology
  • Marine Geosciences
  • Materials
  • Meteorology
  • Ocean Acoustics
  • Oceanography
  • Space Systems and Technology
  • Surveillance and Sensor Technology
  • Undersea Technology

Among a wide range of other specific topics and technologies NRL is currently researching: armor for munitions in transport, high-powered lasers, remote explosives detection, spintronics, the dynamics of explosive gas mixtures, electromagnetic Railgun technology, detection of hidden nuclear materials, graphene devices, high-power extremely high frequency (35–220 GHz) amplifiers, acoustic lensing, information-rich orbital coastline mapping, arctic weather forecasting, global aerosol analysis & prediction, high-density plasmas, millisecond pulsars, broadband laser data links, virtual mission operation centers, battery technology, photonic crystals, carbon nanotube electronics, electronic sensors, mechanical nano-resonators, solid-state chemical sensors, organic opto-electronics, neural-electronic interfaces and self-assembling nanostructures.[2][5]

The laboratory houses a wide range of R&D facilities. The most recent additions include the NRL Nanoscience Institute's 5000sqft Class 100 nanofabrication cleanroom [6] and quiet measurement labs and the Laboratory for Autonomous Systems Research (LASR).[7]

Notable Accomplishments

Space Sciences

The Naval Research Laboratory has been a crucial piece of the United States space program. Project Vanguard, the first American satellite program, tasked NRL with the design, construction and launch of an artificial satellite, which was accomplished in 1958. Vanguard I, designed and built at NRL, was the first solar-powered satellite. As of 2013, Vanguard I is still in orbit, making it the longest-lived man-made satellite. Vanguard II was the first satellite to observe the Earth's cloud cover and therefore the first meteorological satellite. NRL pioneered the study of the sun Ultraviolet and X-Ray spectrum. Along with Project Vanguard, NRL also designed the first satellite tracking system, Minitrack, which became the prototype for future satellite tracking networks. NRL's recently declassified Galactic Radiation and Background I (GRAB I) was the first U.S. intelligence satellite, intercepting Soviet radio communications from space. The Global Positioning System (GPS) was invented at NRL and tested by NRL prototype satellites Timation I and Timation II in 1967 and 1969.[3] NRL's spacecraft development program continues today with the TacSat-4 experimental tactical reconnaissance & communication satellite. In addition to spacecraft design, NRL also designs and operates research instruments, such as the Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph Experiment (LASCO)[8] aboard the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO)

Materials Science

The use of Industrial Radiography with gamma rays at NRL dating back to the 1920s expedited the nondestructive inspection of metal casings and welds, contributing greatly to American seapower in the 20th century. Modern mechanical fracture mechanics were pioneered at NRL and were subsequently applied to solve fracture problems in Navy vessels, commercial aircraft and Polaris missiles. That knowledge is in widespread use today in applications ranging from design of nuclear reactors to aircraft, submarines and toxic material storage tanks.[3]

In the 1970s NRL developed a method of growing high-purity single crystals of Gallium Arsenide (GaAs),[3] enabling fabrication of high-frequency (250 GHz) GaAs transistors, integrated circuits and solar cells. This technology is the basis of many military radar, weapons and communication systems and commercial radar, satellite and cellular communication systems. High-efficiency GaAs solar cells power the Spirit and Opportunity rovers currently on Mars.[9]

Electronic Warfare & Information Security

The first modern U.S. radar was invented and developed at NRL in 1922. By 1939 NRL installed the first operational radar aboard the USS New York, in time for radar to contribute to naval victories of the Coral Sea, Midway and Guadalcal. NRL then further developed over-the-horizon radar as well as radar data displays.[3] The laboratory is responsible for the identification, friend or foe (IFF) system.

The Information Technology Division has a world-class information security R&D group, which is where the IETF's IP Security (IPsec) protocols were originally developed. The projects developed by the laboratory often become mainstream applications without public awareness of the developer; an example in computer science is onion routing.

Nuclear Power

Research into Uranium enrichment at NRL contributed to the Manhattan Project and guided the design of Oak Ridge National Lab's Uranium enrichment plant. The concept of a nuclear-powered submarine was also hatched at NRL in 1939.[3] NRL is currently developing laser focusing techniques aimed at inertial confinement fusion technology.[10]

Physics & Chemistry

After World War II, the laboratory developed modern synthetic lubricants initially for use in the Navy's jet aircraft but they were subsequently adopted by the commercial jet industry.[3] In the late 1960s, NRL researched low-temperature physics, achieving for the first time a temperature within one millionth of a degree of absolute zero in 1967. In 1985 two scientists at the laboratory, Herbert A. Hauptman and Jerome Karle, won the Nobel Prize for devising direct methods employing X-ray diffraction analysis in the determination of crystal structures. Their methods form the basis for the computer packages used in pharmaceutical labs and research institutions worldwide for the analysis of more than 10,000 new substances each year.[11]

Employees & Organization

As of July 2012, NRL has 2,413 full-time employees, the majority being professional or technical scientists and engineers (70%) along with administrative staff (26%), enlisted military (2%), military officers (1%) and senior executives (1%). Of permanent civilian employees, 31 percent have Bachelor's degrees, 21 percent have Master's degrees and 47 percent have a Doctorate degree.[2] The laboratory also hosts post-doctoral researchers and was voted #15 in the Best Places to Work Postocs 2013 survey.[12]

The laboratory is divided into four research directorates, one funding directorate, and one executive directorate. All the directorates are headquartered in Washington, D.C., and many have other facilities elsewhere.

The four research directorates are:

  • The Systems Directorate is responsible for performing a range of activities from basic research through engineering development to expand the operational capabilities of the US Navy. There are four research divisions: Radar, Information Technology, Optical Sciences, and Tactical Electronic Warfare.
  • The Materials Science and Component Technology Directorate carries out a range of materials research with the aim of better understanding of the materials in order to develop improved and advanced materials for use by the US Navy. There are seven research divisions: Laboratory for the Structure of Matter, Chemistry, Material Science & Technology, Laboratory for Computational Physics and Fluid Dynamics, Plasma Physics, Electronics Science & Technology, and the Center for Biomolecular Science & Engineering.
  • The Ocean and Atmospheric Science and Technology Directorate performs research in the fields of acoustics, remote sensing, oceanography, marine geosciences, marine meteorology, and space science.[13] There are six research divisions: Acoustics, Remote Sensing, Oceanography, Marine Geosciences, Marine Meteorology, and Space Science.
  • The mission of the Naval Center for Space Technology (NCST) is to preserve and enhance a strong space technology base and provide expert assistance in the development and acquisition of space systems for naval missions. There are two research divisions: Space Systems Development and Spacecraft Engineering.

The two support directorates are:

  • The Executive Directorate operations are directed by the Commander of the NRL, who typically is a US Navy Captain. In addition to management functions, the Directorate also manages the Nanoscience Institute (NSI), founded in April 2001 as a multidisciplinary nanotechnology research institute at the intersections of the fields of materials, electronics and biology. Scientific Development Squadron ONE (VXS-1),[14] located at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, which provides airborne research facilities to NRL as well as other agencies of the US Government, is also run out of the Executive Directorate.
  • The Business Operations Directorate provides program management for the business programs which support the scientific directorates of NRL. It provides contracting, financial management and supply expertise to the scientific projects.

Locations

Naval Research Laboratory complex seen from the air above the Potomac River
NRL Scientific Development Squadron ONE NP-3D Orion of VXS-1.

The main campus of NRL is in Washington, DC, near the southernmost part of the District. It is on the Potomac River and is immediately adjacent to (but not part of) Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling.

In addition, NRL operates several field sites and satellite facilities:[2][15]

History

The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, the first modern research institution created within the United States Navy, began operations at 1100 on 2 July 1923.[17]

Early history

The Naval Research Laboratory came into existence from an idea that originated from Thomas Edison. In a May 1915 editorial piece in the New York Times Magazine, Edison wrote; "The Government should maintain a great research laboratory... In this could be developed...all the technique of military and naval progression without any vast expense."[18] This statement addressed concerns about World War I in the United States.[17]

Edison then agreed to serve as the head of the Naval Consulting Board that consisted of civilians who had achieved expertise. The focus of the Naval Consulting Board was as advisor to the U.S. Navy pertaining to science and technology. The board brought forward a plan to create a modern facility for the Navy. In 1916 Congress allocated $1.5 million for implementation. However, construction was delayed until 1920 because of the war and internal disagreements within the board.[17]

The Laboratory's two original divisions - Radio and Sound - performed research in the fields of high-frequency radio and underwater sound propagation.[17] They produced communications equipment, direction-finding devices, sonar sets, and perhaps most significant of all, the first practical radar equipment built in the United States. They performed basic research, participating, for example, in the discovery and early exploration of the ionosphere. Moreover, the NRL was able to work gradually toward its goal of becoming a broadly based research facility. By the beginning of World War II, five new divisions had been added: Physical Optics, Chemistry, Metallurgy, Mechanics and Electricity, and Internal Communications.[17]

World War II years and growth

Total employment at the NRL jumped from 396 in 1941 to 4400 in 1946, expenditures from $1.7 million to $13.7 million, the number of buildings from 23 to 67, and the number of projects from 200 to about 900. During World War II, scientific activities necessarily were concentrated almost entirely on applied research. New electronics equipment - radio, radar, sonar - was developed. Countermeasures were devised. New lubricants were produced, as were antifouling paints, luminous identification tapes, and a sea marker to help save survivors of disasters at sea. A thermal diffusion process was conceived and used to supply some of the U-235 isotope needed for one of the first atomic bombs. Also, many new devices that developed from booming wartime industry were type tested and then certified as reliable for the Fleet.[17]

Since WWII

As a result of the scientific accomplishments of the war years, the United States emerged into the postwar era determined to consolidate its wartime gains in science and technology and to preserve the working relationship between its armed forces and the scientific community. While the Navy was establishing the Office of Naval Research (ONR) as a liaison with and supporter of basic and applied scientific research, the Navy encouraged NRL to broaden its scope since it was the Navy Department's corporate research laboratory. NRL was placed under the administrative oversight of ONR after ONR was created. A parallel shift of the Laboratory's research emphasis to one of long-range basic and applied investigation in a broad range of the physical sciences.[2]

However, rapid expansion during the war had left NRL improperly structured to address long-term Navy requirements. One major task - neither easily nor rapidly accomplished - was that of reshaping and coordinating research. This was achieved by transforming a group of largely autonomous scientific divisions into a unified institution with a clear mission and a fully coordinated research program. The first attempt at reorganization vested power in an executive committee composed of all the division superintendents. This committee was impracticably large, so in 1949, a civilian director of research was named and given full authority over the program. Positions for associate directors were added in 1954.[2]

In 1992, the previously separate Naval Oceanographic and Atmospheric Research Laboratory (NOARL), with centers in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, and Monterrey, California, was merged into NRL. NRL now is additionally the lead Navy center for research in ocean and atmospheric sciences, with special strengths in physical oceanography, marine geosciences, ocean acoustics, marine meteorology, and remote oceanic and atmospheric sensing.[17]

See also

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Government document "http://www.nrl.navy.mil".

  1. "Mission". United States Naval Research Laboratory. Retrieved 9 December 2013. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 "NRL Fact Book". U. S. Naval Research Laboratory. 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2013. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 "The Little Book of Big Achievements". U. S. Naval Research Laboratory. 2000. Retrieved 31 January 2014. 
  4. http://www.nature.com/nnano/journal/v3/n3/full/nnano.2008.51.html
  5. http://www.nrl.navy.mil/nanoscience/programs.php
  6. "Naval Research Laboratory Nanoscience Institute". U. S. Naval Research Laboratory. 2012. Retrieved 31 January 2014. 
  7. http://www.engadget.com/2012/05/01/lasr-behind-the-curtain-of-the-navys-robotics-laboratory/
  8. http://lasco-www.nrl.navy.mil/
  9. https://rt.grc.nasa.gov/power-in-space-propulsion/photovoltaics-power-technologies/technology-thrusts/photovoltaics-for-mars/
  10. http://www.nrl.navy.mil/media/news-releases/2013/nrl-nike-laser-focuses-on-nuclear-fusion
  11. http://www.nrl.navy.mil/accomplishments/awards-recognitions/nobel-prize/
  12. http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/34849/title/Best-Places-to-Work-Postdocs-2013/
  13. US Navy. "NRL - Ocean & Atmospheric Science Directorate". NRL. Retrieved 2008-07-20. 
  14. Scientific Development Squadron ONE (VXS-1)
  15. "Field Sites". U. S. Naval Research Laboratory. Retrieved 10 December 2013. 
  16. "SSDD Facilities". U. S. Naval Research Laboratory. Retrieved 10 December 2013. 
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 17.6 "Highlights of NRL's First 75 Years" (PDF). NRL. October 1998. 
  18. "Big Laboratory for Navy Planned" (PDF). NY Times. 1915-10-08. Retrieved 2008-07-05. 

External links

Coordinates: 38°49′26″N 77°01′21″W / 38.82389°N 77.02250°W / 38.82389; -77.02250

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