Screening Device to Replace the Pat-down at Harbors
by Nathan Eagle
The Garden Island-Kauai News
A new security measure will be added to Hawai’i’s four main harbors by the end of next year, state officials said yesterday. Travelers will go through a “non-invasive” passenger screening system capable of detecting improvised explosive devices and other potential threats, said Michael Formby, deputy director of the state Department of Transportation, Harbors Division.
“This machinery replaces the pat-down,” he said. “There will be no more physical touching.” The radiation-free imaging system will be installed at Honolulu, Kahului, Hilo and Nawiliwili harbors.
“Even though we’re a small isolated community, we have to also be diligent in looking for dangerous items,” state Sen. Gary Hooser, D-Kaua’i/Ni’ihau, said. Gov. Linda Lingle on Monday released $296,983 to construct the systems. The funds represent the state’s matching share of a federal Homeland Security grant of $890,947, according to a news release from the governor’s office.
Given the strong federal match, it makes sense for the state to come up with its portion, Hooser said. “If we had to provide the entire amount, it might not be a priority,” he said. The funds were appropriated in 2004.
The system will relay information to the Honolulu Harbor Surveillance Command Information System, State Law Enforcement Coalition at the state capitol and State Civil Defense.
The initial core technology was developed by Trex for the U.S. government to detect suicide bombs. Sago Systems, a Trex subsidiary, was created in 2005 to solely focus on the commercialization and sales of the security products, said Linda Jameson, vice president of business development for Trex and Sago.
“Hawai’i is leading the nation in port security,” she said. “It’s a big issue.” The system will be able to detect metallic and non-metallic weapons on passengers.
Anything that is blocking the body’s natural heat — from guns and knives to cell phones — will appear as an actual outline of the object, Jameson said. “It’s much different and much safer than what you see at a typical airport,” she said. Security personnel will instantly have an idea of what they are dealing with, Jameson said. The system also has an algorithm in place that keeps body parts from being revealed, she said.
Passengers will go through the normal screening process and if they trigger that alarm, instead of being pulled aside to be frisked by security personnel, they will pass through this new system, Formby said.
“Port security is a top priority for our state and nation,” Lingle said in the news release. “This system will strengthen security at Hawai’i’s passenger ports, enhance our ability to respond to threats and help us to save lives and protect property.”
Construction is scheduled to begin in November and be completed by December 2009.
Nathan Eagle, staff writer, can be reached at 245-3681 (ext. 224) or neagle@kauaipubco.com
Missile Defense Agency Leads Way to Fiberless Data Made Easy
by L. Scott Tillett
A technology with a history of funding from the missile defense program has spawned a new product that should make high-speed, broadband wireless data communications easier and more viable for new users. The product, developed by a subsidiary of Trex Enterprises Corporation (San Diego, CA), is a line-of-sight, millimeter-wave radio system that will compete with fiber-optic cable, offering data rates as high as 1.5 gigabits per second (Gbps)-the equivalent of transmitting the contents of a standard DVD in about 25 seconds.
The new offering, known as the L1000, is being marketed by Trex subsidiary Loea Corporation as a multirate product, meaning that the system also could work easily with more commonplace wireless networks that operate at 125 megabits (Mbps) per second (about one-twelfth the speed of a 1.5-Gbps network). The product recently received FCC certification.
The idea, according to Loea leaders, is to give users an easily configurable product that can plug into almost any network to create a fiberless link. Adding the L1000 to a network could allow city governments, for example, to beam data quickly among downtown office buildings instead of having to tear up streets to install fiber-optic cables. Or the new product could enhance high-speed data communications in other environments where running cable can prove costly or disruptive. Network overseers at universities, military bases, and other campus-like environments could find the L1000 useful. The product has been designed to operate with commercial off-the-shelf switches, routers, and encryption devices, according to Trex officials.
Trex, which previously has operated under the names Thermoelectron Technologies Corporation and ThermoTrex Corporation, has a long history of funding from missile defense programs. BMDO, a predecessor of MDA, originally awarded the company a series of Innovative Science & Technology contracts to develop communications systems that could transmit audio and video data at high rates. As the company worked on the various projects, the focus fell on millimeter-wave tech-nology, which transmits data at extremely high frequencies and offers greater bandwidth capabilities than microwave communications.
Commercial jumpstarter
For several years, Loea has been turning out commercially available data-communications systems built around its BMDO-funded technology. Loea products typically include a 2-foot dish for transmitting and receiving data. But the L1000 goes in a new direction. The product, which resembles a hobbyist telescope, has a 10-inch lens that serves as the antenna. Tom Fargo, a retired U.S. Navy admiral who serves as chairman and CEO of Loea, said the key to jumpstarting adoption of millimeter-wave technology is ease of use and affordability.
“By making it a little smaller, a little simpler, a little easier to align, and by reducing the cost-the cost has come down by over 60 percent-we are able to put it in more locations and adapt it to more applications,” he said. Loea has set the U.S. list price for the L1000 at $24,000, which includes two antennas, each weighing only 12 pounds.
Company officials said the product requires no elaborate or expensive mounting gear. By comparison, using a more traditional fiber-optic connection instead of the L1000 could cost users as much as $70,000 per mile (1.6 kilometers) just to trench the fiber-optic cable, according to Loea. As another example, company officials researched and determined that the average cost to connect a cell-phone base station using fiber is about $300,000, compared with less than $30,000 to connect the station using Loea’s products.
“Eventually, as people demand video and imagery over wireless circuits, you are going to have to get up into the [gigabit-per-second] range, so you’ve got to drive the price down so the telecom industry will find this as a reasonable alternative,” said Fargo, explaining that wireless phone-service providers should find the technology especially useful for expanding and enhancing their networks. “And we’d like them to use it now as opposed to waiting until they absolutely have to have more bandwidth.”
Addressing standards
The L1000 system produces 100 milliwatts of output power and operates in the radio-frequency band of 71-76 gigahertz (GHz), as well as the 81-86 GHz band. As the system transmits and receives data, the width of the data beam holds steady within a range of 1.2 degrees. The other dish-based Loea products, by comparison, have a tighter “pencil-beam” beam width of 0.42 degrees.
Loea maintains that the L1000 will perform well in all weather, with a 99.999 percent availability at distances greater than 1 kilometer. The product is compatible with data infrastructures and standards such as Sonet, Internet Protocol, Gigabit E, and other standard or proprietary data rates between 125 Mbps and 1.5 Gbps. Trex and Loea have about 10 patents that cover the core technology behind the L1000 and its sister products. The companies have another handful of patent filings working their way through the approval process.
The companies are not alone in their pursuit of fiber-like capabilities via high-frequency wireless technology. But Fargo said he believes price and ease of use will distinguish the L1000 from other products competing in the market.
The L1000 joins an existing line of Loea’s products that already has been used by customers such as the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor. Loea’s products also have been used in a metropolitan area network for Santa Fe, NM, and for high-definition television “backhaul” communications for Super Bowl XXXVII (2003), transmitting data between remote sites and a central site.
Loea has deployed about 100 links throughout the United States and Mexico while working with customers in application areas such as enterprise architectures, telecommunications, cellular backhaul communications, and remote data storage, as well as military and emergency-responder communications.
This article originally appeared in “MDA TechUpdate,” a quarterly newsletter published by the Missile Defense Agency’s Technology Applications (TA) program. The TA program offers a range of services to MDA-funded researchers to help them commercialize their technologies. For information about the program, contact the National Technology Transfer Center – Washington Operations at 703-518-8800 or techapps@nttc.edu.
Fiberless Data Made Easy
A High-performance Optical Challenger
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is Conducting Research
MEDB: Trex Enterprises
By TRAVIS KAYA, Staff Writer, Maui News
KAHULUI
Sounding more like science fiction than fact, space situational awareness technology may one day give the U.S. military the ability to accurately track more than 10,000 objects known to orbit the Earth, protecting vital communication and surveillance satellites from an enemy attack.
With international military implications, the space age technology is being developed by Trex Enterprises here on Maui, turning the Valley Isle and the Maui Space Surveillance System into a nerve center for some of the most sophisticated imaging and optical technology in the country.
“These are nationally critical programs,” said Trex Enterprises Program Manager Kevin Miyashiro.
First attracted to the islands in the late 1990s after winning a $15 million Air Force contract to oversee the surveillance site atop Haleakala, Trex has grown from an eight-employee operation into one of the biggest tech companies on the island, due in part to the support of the Maui Economic Development Board.
“I view MEDB as a high-tech partner striving for the same goals,” said Trex Program Manager Daron Nishimoto. “They’ve been invaluable to our growth.”
A key was when the Maui Research & Technology Center “incubator” facility offered space to Trex until it established itself. The R&T Center was one of the first facilities constructed in the Maui Research & Technology Park developed by MEDB through a partnership with a consortium of Maui businesses and investors.
In addition to the assist with “incubator” space, which the company has since outgrown, Trex continues to receive support from MEDB in employee recruitment, publicity campaigns and internship programs that have attracted some of the best and brightest workers available.
“It’s a very competitive process to hire top talent,” Nishimoto said. “There was a time when it was hard to find people in Hawaii, but with MEDB’s help we don’t have to convince people that there are technology jobs here on Maui.
”In addition to attracting Mainland talent from some of the nation’s best universities, MEDB also has helped companies like Trex bring engineers from Hawaii who have established careers on the Mainland back to the islands.
“Many of the people we have hired are local,” said Allen Hunter, vice president of Trex Enterprises and member of the MEDB board of directors. “The MEDB has been helpful in helping us identify employees.
”According to Miyashiro, who is a Hawaii native who worked in Los Angeles before moving to Maui three years ago, MEDB provides prospective employees with valuable information about career opportunities on Maui.
“You have somebody on the inside that provides information for everyone on the outside,” he said. “Having somebody like MEDB to provide that insight is good.
”In order to give Hawaii college and graduate-school students opportunities in the tech industry, Trex also hosts interns every summer through the Akamai internship program funded by MEDB and the national Center for Adaptive Optics. Providing a stipend for interns, the program gives students across the nation a chance to get their feet wet in a professional setting without putting a financial burden on Maui businesses.
This year, four of Trex’s five interns are from Hawaii.
“I was really pleased that I could come home and pursue a tech job,” said Jordan Otomo, a Stanford University senior who has interned with Trex for the past three summers. “It’s been really informative, and it’s really shown me what the industry is like.”
Since establishing itself in the islands, Trex also has created four spinoff ventures in Hawaii, each specializing in a specific technological field. In addition to its work on satellite imaging, Trex specializes in sensors for the cell-phone market, missile-tracking systems, and high-speed communication technology.
In the coming years, Trex Enterprises hopes to expand its operations, adding to its 14,000-square-foot research space and 35-member staff. According to Nishimoto, Trex is projected to grow by 10 to 15 percent within the next three years.
CrossFiber Develops Optical Switch
CrossFiber Inc., a high-tech firm based in the Maui Research & Technology Park in Kihei, has developed a groundbreaking optical switch, the key technology for eliminating bottlenecks on the information superhighway. Founded in San Diego in 2001, CrossFiber established its main operation on Maui in 2006 as part of Trex Enterprises Corp., working in the field of micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS). CrossFiber’s optical switching modules are being offered for $50 per optical port. Trex Enterprises retains corporate headquarters in San Diego and has operations in Honolulu, Kaua‘i, Maui, New Mexico and Massachusetts. For more information, visit www.crossfiber.com.
Astronaut, Voyager Relate Frontier Tales
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| Former NASA astronaut Bill Shepherd spoke to Kapolei Middle School students yesterday afternoon, fieldingquestions and signing autographs. | ||
By Brittany P. Yap
TWO of the most experienced and influential men of sea and space spent yesterday afternoon talking with 400 Kapolei Middle School students.
Retired Navy Capt. William Shepherd, a former NASA astronaut and the first commander of the International Space Station, and Nainoa Thompson, navigator of the Hokule’a, spoke at a 45-minute assembly and stayed after to answer even the oddest of questions about space and the sea.
Shepherd and Thompson are close friends who met in 1990 during a three-way amateur radio call between the Hokule’a, which was voyaging from Rarotonga back to Hawaii, the shuttle Discovery, which was passing over Hawaii, and 30,000 school kids.
Kapolei Middle School received a call on Monday saying Shepherd was going to be in town and wanted to talk to its students. He came to Oahu to celebrate the official opening of the Office of Aerospace Development and the inauguration of the Pacific International Space Center for Exploration Systems.
“I like talking to the kids to find out what they know and don’t know about space,” Shepherd said. “Some of them are quite knowledgeable and know more than their teacher.”
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By George F. Lee
Former NASA astronaut Bill Shepherd spoke to Kapolei Middle School students yesterday afternoon. Here, he got a high five from student Karlee Kawaa.
Shepherd, 56, a former Navy SEAL, was a NASA astronaut for 17 years and flew three flights as a mission specialist on the shuttles Atlantis (1988), Discovery (1990) and Columbia (1992). From 1993 to 1996 he was a program manager and deputy program manager for the International Space Station, and in 1996 was selected as commander of the first crew to live aboard the space station.
“It’s a great honor to have him here to talk to our kids and inspire our kids,” said Marvin Yonamine, the school’s student activities coordinator.
In 2000, after years of training in Moscow, Shepherd and two other Russian cosmonauts docked at the space station and started initial operations in Earth orbit. During their 141-day mission, Expedition One was visited by three space shuttles, added two modules to the station and completed a space voyage of 58 million miles.
Students watched a 20-minute video of the astronauts’ preparation in Moscow, expedition to space and homecoming. They particularly enjoyed watching the men eat, exercise and sleep in space.
“It was cool how they were floating and eating,” said sixth-grader Karlee Kawaa.
About 30 to 40 students stayed after the assembly to shake hands and get autographs.
“I like seeing the clips of space … when they were fixing the space station,” said seventh-grader Stefanie Michaud.
Shepherd said one of the cosmonauts was a former Russian fighter pilot whose job was to train to shoot down American planes. And Shepherd, being in the Navy, had the Russians as adversaries.
“When we were looking down at Earth … in this moment we were flying in the International Space Station, we weren’t Americans or Russians anymore,” he said. “We were living and working together on a totally different enterprise.”
Shepherd has a Bachelor of Science degree in aerospace engineering from the Naval Academy and a master’s degree in mechanical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Today he lives in San Diego and is the president of Trex Federal Systems.
“In our generational time, (Shepherd) is one of our greatest explorers,” Thompson said. “Every time he comes to Hawaii, he calls me up. And every time he calls me, it’s an honor.”
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