During a visit to the lab in August, DHS S&T staff learned about ORNL's unique identity science research and biometric capabilities. Credit: Eric Swanson/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy
ORNL welcomed visitors from DHS S&T for tours and discussions
Last month, 91°”Íű hosted visitors from the to better understand the laboratoryâs facilities and research expertise and how it applies to homeland security missions.
ORNL partners with DHS on several national and homeland security projects â such as â and the labâs science capabilities could benefit several additional DHS missions.
âORNL and S&T continue to be an extremely effective team. Weâre communicating constantly,â said Tim OâConnor, acting director of DHS S&Tâs Office of National Labs. âIn doing so, weâve managed to collaborate quickly and effectively to deliver technical solutions to DHS components. Being able to pick up the phone and work out a tough question in real-time is a particularly important quality of our relationship and our peopleâs ability to cooperate.â
The August visit focused on ORNLâs multidisciplinary research in several areas critical to DHS missions: biological and environmental systems, cyber science, biometrics, remote sensing, advanced manufacturing and critical infrastructure resilience.
âOur multidisciplinary research across a broad variety of disciplines here at ORNL can contribute to solving DHSâs mission challenges,â said ORNL's Craig Moss, program director for Defense and Homeland Security. âThe more we can connect our researchers with end users like DHS, the more weâll be able to deliver key solutions in homeland security.â
ORNLâs foundational research into biological and environmental systems, for example, could support S&Tâs . To highlight these capabilities, ORNL biosecurity programs lead David Graham and Mindy Clark of the Biosciences Division provided a tour of ORNLâs Advanced Plant Phenotyping Laboratory, which offers a suite of imaging capabilities more diverse than any other plant phenotyping systems worldwide.
Other tour stops included:
- the new Cyber Science Research Facility and its Embedded Systems Security lab, Cyber Operations Research Range and Industrial Control Systems testbed;
- the biometric range for researching identity sciences, where the group witnessed a demonstration of a facial recognition technology that is currently being commercialized through DHSâs ;
- Tycho Station, ORNLâs recently commissioned small satellite ground station that is reducing the time from data collection to actional information in the hand of decision makers during disasters; and
- the Grid Research Integration and Deployment Center, which houses multiple electrification research activities across the utilities, microgrids, buildings and vehicle spaces.
The DHS team left with more than just a better understanding of the laboratoryâs capabilities and facilities â the visit is already delivering results.
âWe have a potential answer to a component âhard question,â a follow-on action for a collaborative project, and an opportunity to align research agendas,â OâConnor said. âOutstanding efforts by all involved.â
UT-Battelle manages ORNL for the Department of Energyâs Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. The Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit .