2012-08-01 research naval postgraduate school, v.4, … composed of dusn ppoi, dasn/rdt&e,...

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Calhoun: The NPS Institutional Archive Research and Sponsored Programs Office (RSPO) Research Naval Postgraduate School (NPS Research Newsletter) 2012-08-01 Research Naval Postgraduate School, v.4, no. 12, August 2012 Monterey, California, Research and Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President and Dean of Research, Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) Naval Postgraduate School Research, v. 4, no. 12 August 2012 ; pp 1-6 http://hdl.handle.net/10945/30381

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Calhoun: The NPS Institutional Archive

Research and Sponsored Programs Office (RSPO) Research Naval Postgraduate School (NPS Research Newsletter)

2012-08-01

Research Naval Postgraduate School,

v.4, no. 12, August 2012

Monterey, California, Research and Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President and

Dean of Research, Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)

Naval Postgraduate School Research, v. 4, no. 12 August 2012 ; pp 1-6

http://hdl.handle.net/10945/30381

GSBPP$13.2M

5% GSEAS$67.4M

26%

GSOIS$78.5M

31%

Ins8tutes&Other

$52.8M21%

SIGS$39.0M

15%

AcademicAffairs

$5.4M2%

VOLUME 4, NO. 12 AUGUST 2012RESEARCH AT NPS

Research and Sponsored Programs Offi ce (RSPO)Offi ce of the Vice President and Dean of ResearchNaval Postgraduate School

Danielle Kuska, DirectorResearch and Sponsored Programs Offi ce

[email protected]

Sponsored programs status, July 2012Funds Available: $256.3M

$13.2M

5% GSEASGSEAS

Ins8tutes&Ins8tutes&OtherOther

$39.0M

15%

$5.4M2%

GSBPP$13.2MIns8tutes&Ins8tutes&

SIGS

AcademicAcademicAffairs

$5.4M

AirForce$52.1M

20% Army$9.9M

4%

CRADA$1.8M

1%DoD

$76.7M

30%

DHS$22.3M

9%

Joint$4.6M

2%

Navy$57.1M

22%

NSF$19.0M

7%

Other$1.0M

<1%

Other‐Fed$11.9M

5% 20% ArmyArmyNavy

$57.1M$57.1M 7% <1% 5%

AirForce$52.1M

ArmyArmyNavyNavy

NSF$19.0M

Other$1.0M

Other‐Fed$11.9M

CRADA$2.0M

1%

Educa2on$40.6M

16%Research$184.8M

72%

Service$29.0M

11%

By Type of Activity

By School

By Sponsor

Research Updates

...continued on page 3

FY13 Indirect Cost Rates: FY13 indirect rate structure is based on a fi xed dollar amount per labor hour. Labor hours includes both NPS labor and contract labor. The dollar rate listed below will be added to each hour of labor executed on a sponsored activity.

• Research: $26.24• Education: $27.02• Professional Development: $16.02• Other Sponsored Activity: $6.01

More information is available at http://intranet.nps.edu/ResAdmin/FY13/FY13_Indirect_Cost_Recovery_Rates-18Ju ly2012 .pdfFY13 Proposal Budget templates are located at http://intranet.nps.edu/ResAdmin/FY13/prop_budg_page.html.

Proposal Routing Form: The new Proposal Routing Form (PRF) for research can be found at http://intranet.nps.edu/ResAdmin/templates/proposal_routing_form.pdf. The new PRF eliminates the need for a separate signature page. Data collected from the PRF will be utilized for the research portal under development.

Service/Recharge Centers: NPS will implement Service/Recharge Centers in FY13 as a means of directly recovering costs for services provided to sponsored projects. Service/Recharge Centers also keep indirect costs at a minimum as the costs of these services are not included in the indirect cost pool utilized to calculate indirect cost rates. Information on the two Service/Recharge Centers currently established can be found at http://intranet.nps.edu/ResAdmin/FY13/Recharge_Service_Contracting.pdf and http://intranet.nps.edu/ResAdmin/FY13/Recharge_Service_Grants.pdf.

The Brown Bag Seminar Calendar is being developed for FY13 and will be included in next month’s issue of Research News. Accountability modules which are required for all PIs/PDs will be available in mid-September.

CDR Dan Straub, USN, will de-fend his dissertation in security studies, “Outsourcing Human Se-curity: The Pros and Cons of Pri-vate Security Companies (PSCs) in Peacekeeping” in September. Straub’s research examines the role of the United Nations as an interna-tional organization that intervenes in state affairs with the proclaimed aim of ending “the scourge of war”

and promoting world peace. The UN often uses peacekeeping to fur-ther this goal. Meanwhile, private security companies claim to offer fl exible capability that can assist organizations and states toward im-provements in human security. PSC services range from protecting diplomats to providing security for major corporations, NGOs, and the UN. They claim they can perform better, cheaper, and faster than states or organizations like the UN. For example, supporters of PSCs claim that they could have prevented atrocities in Rwanda, Srebrenica, and Congo. Opponents to their increased use cite cost, morality, legiti-macy, loyalty, fraud, accountability, and political will. In an era where states often lack critical capabilities for protecting the peace or prevent-

2

Sponsored Program Statistics

By SponsorBy Department By SponsorAirForce$5.5M

8%

Army$1.3M

2%

CRADA$550K

1%

DoD$17.8M

26%

DHS$75K

<1%

Joint$1.5M

2%

NAVY$28.5M

42%

NSF$5.7M

9%

Other$145K

<1%

Other‐Fed$6.3M

10%

By Department

AppliedMathema-cs

$1.3M

2%

Electrical&Computer

Engineering

$5.6M8%

Mechanical&Aerospace

Engineering

$11.7M17%

Meteorology$5.0M

7%Oceanography

$13.1M

19%

Physics$14.4M

22%

SpaceSystems$4.5M

7%

SystemsEngineering

$11.1M

17%

UnderseaWarfare$802K

1%

Graduate School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Funds available to date: $67.4M

Projects funded in July• Joint Threat Warning System Maritime Threat Signals Projec-

tion and Research, John McEachen, ECE (USSOCOM)• Gene G. SIAM Summer School, Frank Giraldo, MA (NSF)• Effi cient Galerkin Methods for Global Nonhydrostatic Atmo-

spheric Modeling, Frank Giraldo, MA (NSF)• Constant Volume Combustion Technology Development, Chris

Brophy, MAE (AFRL)• Energy Systems Technical Evaluation Program (ESTEP):

Quickstarts, Anthony Gannon, MAE (ONR)• Littoral Oceanography for Mine Warfare with Underwater Un-

manned Vehicle, Peter Chu, OC (NAVOCEANO)

• CENCOOS: Integrating Marine Operations for Decision Mak-ers and the General Public, Jeff Paduan, OC (NOAA)

• Condensed Matter Nuclear Science, Phase IIC: Standard Heat Experiment Modeling, Mike Melich, SE (DTRA)

• SEM-PD21 721-131 Cohort, Wally Owen, SE (Various)• MS Systems Engineering, Wally Owen, SE (Various)• Robust Guidance for Prompt Global Strike Missions, Mike

Ross, SP (DARPA)• Automated Vision-Based System for Test Articles Character-

ization, Oleg Yakimenko, SE (Yuma Proving Ground)

By Sponsor

AcademicAffairs

$5.4M9%

Cebrowski$5.2M

9%

CIRPAS$14.3M

25%

GlobalPublicPolicy

$1.6M3%

MOVES$9.0M

15%

NPS‐SOCCOMFX

Program$3.2M

6%

NSI$6.1M

10%

Other$13.4M

23%

AirForce$413K

1%

Army$3.9M

7%

CRADA$841K

1%

DoD$22.5M

39%DHS$2.5M

4%

Joint$1.6M

3%

Navy$13.5M

23%

NSF$11.3M

19%

Other$502K

1%

Other‐Fed$1.2M

2%

Research and Education Institutes, Centers, and Other Funds available to date: $52.8M

By Department

Projects funded in July • UNPKO Pre-Deployment Application and Administrative

Support Workshop, Alan Howard, USPTC (NETSAFA)• Technical Support for a Collaborative Sensor Visualization Ca-

pability, Alan Jaeger, NSI (NAWC-Weapons Division)• Combat Operator’s Loadout Decision Tool. CSAR and Person-

nel-Recovery Integration, Warren Yu, Cebrowski (FNMOC)• CDO Log Analysis, Warren Yu, Cebrowski (FNMOC)• ISR Lite for GIS Integration, Warren Yu, Cebrowski (FNMOC)• GIS Effi ciency Study, Warren Yu, Cebrowski (FNMOC)

• Computer Vision Algorithm Collection, Matthias Kolsch, MOVES (DARPA)

• IPARTS LOE Extension, Mike McCauley, MOVES (ONR)• Back-to-Basics, Computer-Based Counter-Piracy Trainer, Perry

McDowell, MOVES (SWOSCOLCOM)• Autonomous Collaboration & Control (AUTOCC) Flight Test,

Bob Bluth, CIRPAS (Northrop Grumman)• Hat Trick UAV Flight Testing, Bob Bluth, CIRPAS (Northrop

Grumman)

Please submit your faculty and research news (published articles, conference proceedings, conference presentations, books, honors received, accomplishments, milestones, etc.) to [email protected].

3

Sponsored Program Statistics

Research and Education Institutes, Centers, and Other Funds available to date: $52.8M

By SponsorComputerScience

$11.6M15%

DefenseAnalysis

$7.1M9%

Informa?onSciences

$48.9M62%

Opera?onsResearch

$10.9M14%

By Sponsor

AirForce$45.5M

58%

Army$2.3M

3%

CRADA$390K

1%

DoD$14.4M

18%

DHS$271K

<1%

Joint$1.1M

1%

Navy$9.2M

12%

NSF$2.1M

3%

Other$381K

<1%

Other‐Fed$2.9M

4%

Graduate School of Operational and Information Sciences Funds available to date: $78.5M

By Department

School of International Graduate Studies Funds available to date: $39.0M

Army$52K

<1%

DoD$17.8M

46%

DHS$19.4M

50%

Joint$58K

<1%

Navy$626K

1%

Other$2K

<1%

Other‐Fed$1.1M

3%• CHDS-NPS Homeland Defense and Security Leadership Development (FCLP-1202), Ted Lewis (DHS)

• Scenario Planning, Lyman Miller (PACOM)

By SponsorProject funded in July:

Graduate School of Business and Public Policy Funds available to date: $13.2M

AirForce$734K

6%

Army$2.3M

17%

DoD$4.1M

31%

Joint$332K

2%

Navy$5.3M

40%

Other‐Fed$482K

4%

By SponsorProjects funded in July: • Civilian EMBA Program, Bill Hatch (Various)

Projects funded in July• Navy Certifi er Special Offering, Karen Burke, CS (NCTS Far

East)• Packet Carving and Visualization, Simson Garfi nkel, CS (FBI)• Cyber Analogies, John Arquilla, DA (US CYBERCOMMAND)• Iran Futures Workshop, Glenn Robinson, DA (USCENTCOM

SOCCENT/ J5)• R & D Support to IDC, Dan Boger, IS (ONI)• Multi-Agency Collaboration Environment (MACE) Technical

Director, Chris Gunderson, IS (DIA)• Assessment of Technologies and Capabilities Affecting Mari-

time Security, John Osmundson, IS (National Maritime Intelli-gence Integration Offi ce)

• Aerial Reconnaissance & Surveillance Optimization Model De-velopment, Emily Craparo, OR (TRAC - MONTEREY)

• Work Patterns in Operational Environments: Preventing Stress-Related Injuries in US Navy, Nita Shattuck, OR (CNO)

• AAV Emergency Egress Study, Larry Shattuck, OR (USMC– Amphibious Vehicle Test Branch

ing war, PSCs may offer a temporary solution to fi ll these crucial gaps. What are the advantages and disadvantages to the use of PSCs for international peacekeeping, not just specifi c tasks, but in the conduct of peacekeeping with legitimacy, accountability, and impartiality, while protecting human security? Since ending the scourge of war is the most important goal of the UN, then human security must be the guiding principle upon which any structures of integration, communication, and interrelationships in peacekeeping are based. Using human security as the lens, this

Ph.D, continued from page 1

dissertation will focus on and evaluate the pros and cons of the use of PSCs in peacekeeping and present analysis that may be used by policy-makers in determining whether or not to consider PSCs for peacekeeping operations. CDR Straub’s advisor is Dis-tinguished Professor Thomas Bruneau.

CDR Straub has been in the Navy twenty-nine years and served on four ships. After NPS, he will transfer to sea in the USS Ingraham (FFG-61) as executive offi cer under the XO/CO fl eet-up program.

4

composed of DUSN PPOI, DASN/RDT&E, chaired by CNR, and documented in the Navy’s upcoming Vision and Strateg y for Directed Energ y Weapons) working-level integrated product teams (IPT) are forming to develop science, technology, and acquisition roadmaps for directed-energy weapons. This IPT will develop and present CDEW roadmaps to senior leadership. Included in the IPT are high- and low-power lasers, lethal or nonlethal, that may have other weapons-level effects (such as jamming or dazzling, leading to a mission abort.) The resulting roadmap will inform and coordinate various activities and leadership levels and enable common, under-standable benchmarks for progress and the setting of program/technical objectives. IPT products will enable senior leadership, program offices, technical managers, and workers to set expecta-tions and guide the Navy to increased comprehension of laser weap-on-systems implications and measured expectations.

Electrical and computer EngineeringYun, X., Calusdian, J., Bachmann, E. R., & McGhee, R. B. (2012). “Estimation of human foot motion during normal walking using inertial and magnetic sensor measurements.” IEEE Transac-tions on Instrumentation and Measurement, 61(7), 2059-2072.

Graduate School of Business and Public PolicyFerrer, H., Owen, G., & Valognes, F. (2012). “Stable syndicates of factor owners and distribution of social output: A Shapley value approach.” Social Choice and Welfare, 39(2-3), 553-565.

Hawkins, T. G., Lewin, J. E., & Amos, C. (2012). “The influ-ence of leader opportunism in B2B exchange.” Journal of Business Research, 65(8), 1112-1118.

MeteorologyAllen, M. S., & Eckel, F. A. (2012). “Value from ambiguity in en-semble forecasts.” Weather and Forecasting, 27(3), 807-807.

Eckel, F. A., Allen, M. S., & Sittel, M. (2012). “Estimation of ambi-guity in ensemble forecasts.” Weather and Forecasting, 27(3), 803-806.

Grachev, A. A., Andreas, E. L., Fairall, C. W., Guest, P. S., & Pers-son, P. O. G. (2012). “Outlier problem in evaluating similarity func-tions in the stable atmospheric boundary layer.” Boundary-Layer Me-teorolog y, 144(2), 137-155.

Montgomery, M. T., & Smith, R. K. (2012). “The genesis of ty-phoon Nuri as observed during the tropical cyclone structure 2008 (TCS08) field experiment - Part 2: Observations of the convective environment.” Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12(9), 4001-4009.

Rutherford, B., Dangelmayr, G., & Montgomery, M. T. (2012). “Lagrangian coherent structures in tropical cyclone intensifica-tion.” Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12(12), 5483-5507.

Shingler, T., Dey, S., Sorooshian, A., Brechtel, F. J., Wang, Z., Met-calf, A., Jonsson, H. H., et al. (2012). “Characterisation and air-borne deployment of a new counterflow virtual impactor inlet.” Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 5(6), 1259-1269.

Applied MathematicsAguilar, C. O. (2012). “On the existence and uniqueness of solu-tions to the output regulation equations for periodic exosystems.” Systems & Control Letters, 61(6), 702-706.

Aguilar, C. O., & Lewis, A. D. (2012). “Small-time local control-lability for a class of homogeneous systems.” SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization, 50(3), 1502-1517.

Computer ScienceChen, X., Rowe, N. C., Wu, J., & Xiong, K. (2012). “Improving the localization accuracy of targets by using their spatial-temporal relationships in wireless sensor networks.” Journal of Parallel and Dis-tributed Computing, 72(8), 1008-1018.

Denning, P. J. (2012). “Closing statement: What have we said about computation?” Computer Journal, 55(7), 863-865.

Denning, P. J. (2012). “Opening statement: What is computation?” Computer Journal, 55(7), 805-810.

Denning, P. J. (2012). “Reflections on a symposium on computa-tion.” Computer Journal, 55(7), 799-802.

Denning, P. J. & Wegner, P. (2012). “Introduction to what is com-putation.” Computer Journal, 55(7), 803-804.

Voas, J., Michael, J. B., & van Genuchten, M. (2012). “The mobile software app takeover.” IEEE Software, 29(4), 25-27.

Center for Decision, Risk, Controls and Signals Intelligence (DRCSI)A manuscript by R. G. Rendon (GSBPP), T. V. Huynh (DRCSI) and J. S. Osmundson (SE and IS) entitled, “Contracting processes and structures for systems-of-systems acquisition,” has been accept-ed and appeared online in the John Wiley Journal: System Engineering. This research was supported by the Acquisition Research Program.

A manuscript by Nathan Moshman (MAE & SSAG), Garth Hobson (MAE) and S. S. Sritharan (DRCSI) entitled, “Optimal Control of Compressible Euler Equations in One Dimension,” has been accepted for publication in the Journal of the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics. S. S. Sritharan completed an intensely scheduled delegation to energize the Indian partnership. He gave twenty seven one-hour lectures in three cities (New Delhi, Coimbatore and Bangalore), In-dian defense laboratories (DRDO), and in a number of prestigious Indian universities (Indian Institute of Science, Tata Institute, In-dian Statistical Institute, Bharathiyar University, etc). The highlight of the presentation was the featured lecture in the defense science forum in New Delhi, organized by the DRDO headquarters, which was televised to all 55 DRDO laboratories across India. See images at http://drdo.gov.in/drdo/dsforum1/lecturesframe.htm. S. S. Sritharan has been invited to serve on the Navy’s Counter Di-rected Energy Weapons (CDEW) integrated product team. Per di-rection from the Naval Directed Energy Steering Group (NDESG,

FACULTY NEWS

...continued on page 5

5

Faculty/student research

FACULTY NEWS, continued from page 4

METeorology/oceanography students present at AMS conference

METOC students LCDR Robin Cher-rett, LCDR Heath-er Hornick, and LT Eric Daley (all USN) presented the-sis work at the 18th Conference on Air–Sea Interaction and 20th Symposium on Boundary Layers and Turbulence, Ameri-

can Meteorological Society, 9-13 July, 2012, in Boston. Cherrett and Daley presented at a special session for a major

international field project, Dynamics of Madden–Julian Oscilla-tion (DYNAMO), in which NPS researchers headed by Professor Qing Wang (Meteorology) took the lead in measurements using the NOAA WP-3D research aircraft. Cherrett’s presentation was on upper-ocean characteristics observed in the tropical Indian Ocean. LT David P. Trampp, a March, 2012, NPS graduate was

a coauthor. Daley spoke on the effects of a small island in modify-ing the marine environment. Hornick’s research is part of her doc-toral work on physical processes in the lower atmosphere and upper ocean in the Gulf of Tehuantepec, using airborne measurements and the Navy’s coupled atmospheric and oceanic models. Hornick won second place in student papers for exceptional research and presentation. All three students worked under Professor Wang.

LCDR Hornick, LCDR Cherrett, & LT Daley

Energetic materials and explosives research group completes successful testing

NPS researchers ( front row): LT Chris Tilly, Professor Brown, CDR Jon VanSlyke, LT Andrew Gilchrist.

Under the direction of Research Professor Ron Brown, the physics department’s Energetic Materials and Explosives Research Group has completed explosive tests at the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant in Middletown, operated by American Ordnance.

Demonstrations during the week of August 6th tested the ap-plicability of an invented method for investigating optimal condi-tions for generating super-fast from shaped charges. This method, which can be adapted for warhead application, sustains detonation velocities and pressures at levels far greater than those that can be achieved by conventional initiation. A patent application has been filed for the initiation system and another is in preparation for the shaped charge.

Results were shown to match predictions completed by lieuten-ants Christopher Tilley and Andrew Gilchrist, USN, master¹s students in the applied physics combat-systems curriculum. Both are scheduled to graduate in the FY13 winter quarter. Doctoral candi-dates CDR Jonathon VanSlyke, USN (physics) and Stan DeFisher (ARDEC) will continue theoretical and experimental research.

The program is sponsored by ONR. Additional funding for stu-dent travel was provided by the NPS Undersea Warfare Chair.

Vogelmann, A. M., McFarquhar, G. M., Ogren, J. A., Turner, D. D., Comstock, J. M., Feingold, G., Jonsson, H. H., et al. (2012). “Racoro extended-term aircraft observations of boundary layer clouds.” Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 93(6), 861-878.

Wang, S., Zheng, X., & Jiang, Q. (2012). “Strongly sheared stratocumulus convection: An observationally based large-eddy simulation study.” Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12(12), 5509-5509.

National Security AFFAIRSKnopf, J. W. (2012). “Varieties of Assurance.” Journal of Strategic Studies, 35(3), 375-399.

Jeffrey W. Knopf, editor, Security Assurances and Nuclear Nonprolif-eration (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2012). Knopf is also the author of two chapters in the volume.

Hornick, and Cherrett taking airborne measurements

...continued on page 6

6

technology transfer/Agreements

Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA)Title: Autonomous Capability for ScanEaglePartner: Insitu, Inc. PI: Doug Horner, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace En-gineeringSummary: NPS and Insitu, Inc. are collaborating to develop an application programming interface (API) to allow convenient access to onboard sensor information and waypoints through the ScanEagle interface to extend the capabilities of the aircraft.

MemorandA of Agreement (MOAs)Title: Project on Advanced Systems and Concepts for Counter-ing WMDPartner: Defense Threat Reduction AgencyPI: Anne Clunan, Department of National Security AffairsSummary: This MOA outlines the relationship between the Cen-ter on Contemporary Conflict (CCC) at NPS and the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) ( J2/5/8R). This MOA supports

DTRA’s mission to counter the full spectrum of threat posed by weapons of mass destruction (WMD) through the establishment of a research unit to conduct innovative futures studies in close col-laboration with, and subject to the direction of, DTRA leadership. The research unit will be known as Project on Advanced Systems and Concepts for Countering WMD (PASCC) under NPS CCC. Title: Memorandum of Agreement between Naval Postgradu-ate School and Naval Sea Systems Command Naval Undersea Warfare Center Division, NewportPartner: Naval Sea Systems Command Undersea Warfare Center Division, NewportPI: Donald Brutzman, Undersea Warfare Academic GroupSummary: This MOA formalizes a relationship and aligns collabo-ration between NUWCDIVNPT and NPS and documents the ob-jectives and responsibilities of the parties with regard to facilitat-ing the sharing of resources, infrastructure, and expertise for the purpose of implementing an ultra-high-performance virtual studio (UHPVS) for distributed video and collaborative visualization.

NPS-PH-12-001 Investigation of the Effect of Convergent Detonation on Metal Acceleration and Gurney

W. Ludwig

Technical REPORTs PUBLISHED

Technical reports may be obtained at http://www.nps.edu/Research/TechReports.html

Jeffrey E. Knopf, “Terrorism and the Fourth Wave in Deterrence Research,” Deterring Terrorism: Theory and Practice, ed. Andreas Wenger and Alex Wilner (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2012). Jeffrey W. Knopf, “NGOs, Social Movements, and Arms Control,” in Arms Control: History, Theory, and Policy, ed. Robert E. Williams, Jr. and Paul R. Viotti (ABC-CLIO/Praeger, 2012).

Maiah Jaskoski, “Public Security Forces with Private Funding: Local Army Entrepreneurship in Peru and Ecuador,” Latin Ameri-can Research Review 47, no. 2 (2012): 79-99.

OceanographyFrolov, S., Paduan, J., Cook, M., & Bellingham, J. (2012). “Im-proved statistical prediction of surface currents based on historic HF-radar observations.” Ocean Dynamics, 62(7), 1111-1122.

Operations ResearchAtkinson, M. & Kress, M. (2012). “On popular response to vio-lence during insurgencies.” Operations Research Letters, 40(4), 223-229.

Petrovic, N., Alderson, D. L., & Carlson, J. M. (2012). “Dynamic resource allocation in disaster response: Tradeoffs in wildfire sup-pression.” PLOS One, 7(4), e33285.

Silvestrini, R. T., & Parker, P. A. (2012). “Aerospace research through statistical engineering.” Quality Engineering, 24(2), 292-305.

Salmeron, J. (2012). “Deception tactics for network interdiction: A multiobjective approach.” Networks, 60(1), 45-58.

Sam Buttrey, James Henry, Lyn Whitaker, Arnie Buss, “DA-VITO: An Open-Source Mapping, Graphics, and Analysis Tool,” presented at Joint Statistical Meetings in San Diego, August 2.

PhysicsAlves, F., Grbovic, D., Kearney, B., & Karunasiri, G. (2012). “Microelectromechanical systems bimaterial terahertz sensor with integrated metamaterial absorber.” Optics Letters, 37(11), 1886-1888.

Alves, F., Karamitros, A., Grbovic, D., Kearney, B., & Karuna-siri, G. (2012). “Highly absorbing nanoscale metal films for tera-hertz applications.” Optical Engineering, 51(6), 063801.

Kearney, B., Alves, F., Grbovic, D., & Karunasiri, G. (2012). “Tunable THz absorption using Al/SiOx planar periodic structures.” Terahertz Physics, Devices, and Systems VI: Advanced Applications in Industry and Defense, 8363, 836309.

J.R. Harris, J.W. Lewellen, and B.R. Poole, “Transverse-longi-tudinal correlations in electron guns,” Journal of Applied Physics 112, 023304 (2012).

Rice, Joseph, “Seaweb Subsurface Sensor Network for Port Sur-veillance and Maritime Domain Awareness,” National Maritime Intel-ligence-Integration Office Technical Bulletin, Summer 2012–Vol 3. http://nmio.ise.gov/docs/NMIO_QuarterlyVOL3.pdf.

Systems EngineeringBonnie Young, “Future Battle Management and Command and Control (BMC2) Capabilities for Joint Combat Operations,” Na-tional Fire Control Symposium (NFCS), Las Vegas, 30 July–2 Au-gust 2012).

FACULTY NEWS, continued from page 5