Submit my resume and unofficial transcript to LCP&FD here. The Laboratories for Computational Physics & Fluid Dynamics (LCP&FD) develop, implement, and apply multidisciplinary computational physics capabilities to solve critical problems facing the Navy, Marine Corps, DoD, and other programs of national interest. Application areas encompass compressible and incompressible fluid dynamics, reactive flows, fluid-structure interaction, atmospheric contaminant and infectious viral transport and the dynamics of turbulence. This research often leverages complementary subject-matter expertise from collaborators within NRL and throughout the broader research community. Read more on the Computational Physics & Fluid Dynamics webpage
The Space Science Division conducts a broad-spectrum of Research, Development, Test & Evaluation (RDT&E) in solar-terrestrial physics, astrophysics, upper/ middle atmospheric science, and astronomy. Instruments to be flown on satellites, sounding rockets and balloons, and ground-based facilities and mathematical models are conceived and developed. Researchers apply these and other capabilities to the study of the atmospheres of the Sun and Earth, including solar activity and its effects on the Earth’s ionosphere, upper atmosphere, and middle atmosphere; laboratory astrophysics; and the unique physics and properties of celestial sources. The science is important to orbital tracking, radio communications, and navigation that affect the operation of ships and aircraft, utilization of the near-space and space environment of the Earth, and the fundamental understanding of natural radiation and geophysical phenomena.
The Space Systems Development Division (SSDD) is the space and ground support systems research and development organization of the Naval Center for Space Technology. The primary objective of the SSDD is to develop command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) hardware and software solutions to space, airborne, and ground applications. To respond to Navy, DoD, and national mission requirements with improved performance, capacity, reliability, efficiency, and/or life cycle costs, the Division must derive system requirements from the mission, develop architectures in response to these requirements, and design and develop systems, subsystems, equipment, and implementation technologies to achieve the optimized, integrated operational space, airborne, and ground systems.
Submit my resume and unofficial transcript to the Remote Sensing Division here. The Remote Sensing Division conducts a program of basic research, science, and applications aimed at the development of new concepts for sensors and imaging systems for objects and targets on the Earth, in the near-Earth environment, and in deep space. The research, both theoretical and experimental, deals with discovering and understanding the basic physical principles and mechanisms that give rise to target and background emission, and to absorption and emission by the intervening medium. The accomplishment of this research requires the development of sensor systems technology. The development effort includes active and passive sensor systems to be used for the study and analysis of the physical characteristics of phenomena that give rise to naturally occurring background radiation, such as that caused by the Earth's atmosphere and oceans, as well as man-made or induced phenomena, such as ship/submarine hydrodynamic effects. The research includes theory, laboratory, and field experiments leading to ground-based, airborne, or space systems for use in such areas as remote sensing, astrometry, astrophysics, surveillance, non-acoustic anti-submarine warfare (ASW), and improved meteorological support systems for the operational Navy. Special emphasis is given to developing space-based platforms and exploiting existing space systems. Read more on the Remote Sensing Division webpage
The Space Science Division conducts a broad-spectrum of Research, Development, Test & Evaluation (RDT&E) in solar-terrestrial physics, astrophysics, upper/ middle atmospheric science, and astronomy. Instruments to be flown on satellites, sounding rockets and balloons, and ground-based facilities and mathematical models are conceived and developed. Researchers apply these and other capabilities to the study of the atmospheres of the Sun and Earth, including solar activity and its effects on the Earth’s ionosphere, upper atmosphere, and middle atmosphere; laboratory astrophysics; and the unique physics and properties of celestial sources. The science is important to orbital tracking, radio communications, and navigation that affect the operation of ships and aircraft, utilization of the near-space and space environment of the Earth, and the fundamental understanding of natural radiation and geophysical phenomena.
The Information Technology Division (ITD) carries out research and development in the collection, transmission, assurance, and processing of information to provide Naval and joint warfighting forces with the means to achieve and maintain information dominance in the battlespace. ITD’s Science & Technology (S&T) program encompasses basic research (6.1), substantial applied research and exploratory development (6.2), continuing efforts to field prototypes through advanced technology demonstrations (6.3), advanced component development and prototyping (6.4), and continuous delivery of software-based enhancements for materiel support and sustainment of fielded systems. The program addresses the technological needs of Navy warfighting systems and stakeholders and receives sponsorship from the Office of Naval Research, Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research & Engineering, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Intelligence Community, as well as Department of the Navy (DON) materiel acquisition programs, industrial activities, and congressionally supported programs involving rapid technology prototyping. In addition to its internal program activities, the Division serves NRL specifically and the DON generally as a consulting body of experts in information technology applications. The program further involves interaction and considerable coordination with US Government, industrial, academic, and international counterparts. Read more on the ITD webpage.
The Information Technology Division (ITD) carries out research and development in the collection, transmission, assurance, and processing of information to provide Naval and joint warfighting forces with the means to achieve and maintain information dominance in the battlespace. ITD’s Science & Technology (S&T) program encompasses basic research (6.1), substantial applied research and exploratory development (6.2), continuing efforts to field prototypes through advanced technology demonstrations (6.3), advanced component development and prototyping (6.4), and continuous delivery of software-based enhancements for materiel support and sustainment of fielded systems. The program addresses the technological needs of Navy warfighting systems and stakeholders and receives sponsorship from the Office of Naval Research, Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research & Engineering, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Intelligence Community, as well as Department of the Navy (DON) materiel acquisition programs, industrial activities, and congressionally supported programs involving rapid technology prototyping. In addition to its internal program activities, the Division serves NRL specifically and the DON generally as a consulting body of experts in information technology applications. The program further involves interaction and considerable coordination with US Government, industrial, academic, and international counterparts. Read more on the ITD webpage.
The Space Science Division conducts a broad-spectrum of Research, Development, Test & Evaluation (RDT&E) in solar-terrestrial physics, astrophysics, upper/ middle atmospheric science, and astronomy. Instruments to be flown on satellites, sounding rockets and balloons, and ground-based facilities and mathematical models are conceived and developed. Researchers apply these and other capabilities to the study of the atmospheres of the Sun and Earth, including solar activity and its effects on the Earth’s ionosphere, upper atmosphere, and middle atmosphere; laboratory astrophysics; and the unique physics and properties of celestial sources. The science is important to orbital tracking, radio communications, and navigation that affect the operation of ships and aircraft, utilization of the near-space and space environment of the Earth, and the fundamental understanding of natural radiation and geophysical phenomena.
The Space Systems Development Division (SSDD) is the space and ground support systems research and development organization of the Naval Center for Space Technology. The primary objective of the SSDD is to develop command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) hardware and software solutions to space, airborne, and ground applications. To respond to Navy, DoD, and national mission requirements with improved performance, capacity, reliability, efficiency, and/or life cycle costs, the Division must derive system requirements from the mission, develop architectures in response to these requirements, and design and develop systems, subsystems, equipment, and implementation technologies to achieve the optimized, integrated operational space, airborne, and ground systems.
The Space Systems Development Division (SSDD) is the space and ground support systems research and development organization of the Naval Center for Space Technology. The primary objective of the SSDD is to develop command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) hardware and software solutions to space, airborne, and ground applications. To respond to Navy, DoD, and national mission requirements with improved performance, capacity, reliability, efficiency, and/or life cycle costs, the Division must derive system requirements from the mission, develop architectures in response to these requirements, and design and develop systems, subsystems, equipment, and implementation technologies to achieve the optimized, integrated operational space, airborne, and ground systems.
The Information Technology Division (ITD) carries out research and development in the collection, transmission, assurance, and processing of information to provide Naval and joint warfighting forces with the means to achieve and maintain information dominance in the battlespace. ITD’s Science & Technology (S&T) program encompasses basic research (6.1), substantial applied research and exploratory development (6.2), continuing efforts to field prototypes through advanced technology demonstrations (6.3), advanced component development and prototyping (6.4), and continuous delivery of software-based enhancements for materiel support and sustainment of fielded systems. The program addresses the technological needs of Navy warfighting systems and stakeholders and receives sponsorship from the Office of Naval Research, Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research & Engineering, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Intelligence Community, as well as Department of the Navy (DON) materiel acquisition programs, industrial activities, and congressionally supported programs involving rapid technology prototyping. In addition to its internal program activities, the Division serves NRL specifically and the DON generally as a consulting body of experts in information technology applications. The program further involves interaction and considerable coordination with US Government, industrial, academic, and international counterparts. Read more on the ITD webpage.
The Space Systems Development Division (SSDD) is the space and ground support systems research and development organization of the Naval Center for Space Technology. The primary objective of the SSDD is to develop command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) hardware and software solutions to space, airborne, and ground applications. To respond to Navy, DoD, and national mission requirements with improved performance, capacity, reliability, efficiency, and/or life cycle costs, the Division must derive system requirements from the mission, develop architectures in response to these requirements, and design and develop systems, subsystems, equipment, and implementation technologies to achieve the optimized, integrated operational space, airborne, and ground systems.
The Information Technology Division (ITD) carries out research and development in the collection, transmission, assurance, and processing of information to provide Naval and joint warfighting forces with the means to achieve and maintain information dominance in the battlespace. ITD’s Science & Technology (S&T) program encompasses basic research (6.1), substantial applied research and exploratory development (6.2), continuing efforts to field prototypes through advanced technology demonstrations (6.3), advanced component development and prototyping (6.4), and continuous delivery of software-based enhancements for materiel support and sustainment of fielded systems. The program addresses the technological needs of Navy warfighting systems and stakeholders and receives sponsorship from the Office of Naval Research, Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research & Engineering, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Intelligence Community, as well as Department of the Navy (DON) materiel acquisition programs, industrial activities, and congressionally supported programs involving rapid technology prototyping. In addition to its internal program activities, the Division serves NRL specifically and the DON generally as a consulting body of experts in information technology applications. The program further involves interaction and considerable coordination with US Government, industrial, academic, and international counterparts. Read more on the ITD webpage.
The Information Technology Division (ITD) carries out research and development in the collection, transmission, assurance, and processing of information to provide Naval and joint warfighting forces with the means to achieve and maintain information dominance in the battlespace. ITD’s Science & Technology (S&T) program encompasses basic research (6.1), substantial applied research and exploratory development (6.2), continuing efforts to field prototypes through advanced technology demonstrations (6.3), advanced component development and prototyping (6.4), and continuous delivery of software-based enhancements for materiel support and sustainment of fielded systems. The program addresses the technological needs of Navy warfighting systems and stakeholders and receives sponsorship from the Office of Naval Research, Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research & Engineering, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Intelligence Community, as well as Department of the Navy (DON) materiel acquisition programs, industrial activities, and congressionally supported programs involving rapid technology prototyping. In addition to its internal program activities, the Division serves NRL specifically and the DON generally as a consulting body of experts in information technology applications. The program further involves interaction and considerable coordination with US Government, industrial, academic, and international counterparts. Read more on the ITD webpage.
The Space Science Division conducts a broad-spectrum of Research, Development, Test & Evaluation (RDT&E) in solar-terrestrial physics, astrophysics, upper/ middle atmospheric science, and astronomy. Instruments to be flown on satellites, sounding rockets and balloons, and ground-based facilities and mathematical models are conceived and developed. Researchers apply these and other capabilities to the study of the atmospheres of the Sun and Earth, including solar activity and its effects on the Earth’s ionosphere, upper atmosphere, and middle atmosphere; laboratory astrophysics; and the unique physics and properties of celestial sources. The science is important to orbital tracking, radio communications, and navigation that affect the operation of ships and aircraft, utilization of the near-space and space environment of the Earth, and the fundamental understanding of natural radiation and geophysical phenomena.
The Space Systems Development Division (SSDD) is the space and ground support systems research and development organization of the Naval Center for Space Technology. The primary objective of the SSDD is to develop command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) hardware and software solutions to space, airborne, and ground applications. To respond to Navy, DoD, and national mission requirements with improved performance, capacity, reliability, efficiency, and/or life cycle costs, the Division must derive system requirements from the mission, develop architectures in response to these requirements, and design and develop systems, subsystems, equipment, and implementation technologies to achieve the optimized, integrated operational space, airborne, and ground systems.
The Information Technology Division (ITD) carries out research and development in the collection, transmission, assurance, and processing of information to provide Naval and joint warfighting forces with the means to achieve and maintain information dominance in the battlespace. ITD’s Science & Technology (S&T) program encompasses basic research (6.1), substantial applied research and exploratory development (6.2), continuing efforts to field prototypes through advanced technology demonstrations (6.3), advanced component development and prototyping (6.4), and continuous delivery of software-based enhancements for materiel support and sustainment of fielded systems. The program addresses the technological needs of Navy warfighting systems and stakeholders and receives sponsorship from the Office of Naval Research, Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research & Engineering, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Intelligence Community, as well as Department of the Navy (DON) materiel acquisition programs, industrial activities, and congressionally supported programs involving rapid technology prototyping. In addition to its internal program activities, the Division serves NRL specifically and the DON generally as a consulting body of experts in information technology applications. The program further involves interaction and considerable coordination with US Government, industrial, academic, and international counterparts. Read more on the ITD webpage.
The Space Science Division conducts a broad-spectrum of Research, Development, Test & Evaluation (RDT&E) in solar-terrestrial physics, astrophysics, upper/ middle atmospheric science, and astronomy. Instruments to be flown on satellites, sounding rockets and balloons, and ground-based facilities and mathematical models are conceived and developed. Researchers apply these and other capabilities to the study of the atmospheres of the Sun and Earth, including solar activity and its effects on the Earth’s ionosphere, upper atmosphere, and middle atmosphere; laboratory astrophysics; and the unique physics and properties of celestial sources. The science is important to orbital tracking, radio communications, and navigation that affect the operation of ships and aircraft, utilization of the near-space and space environment of the Earth, and the fundamental understanding of natural radiation and geophysical phenomena.
The Space Systems Development Division (SSDD) is the space and ground support systems research and development organization of the Naval Center for Space Technology. The primary objective of the SSDD is to develop command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) hardware and software solutions to space, airborne, and ground applications. To respond to Navy, DoD, and national mission requirements with improved performance, capacity, reliability, efficiency, and/or life cycle costs, the Division must derive system requirements from the mission, develop architectures in response to these requirements, and design and develop systems, subsystems, equipment, and implementation technologies to achieve the optimized, integrated operational space, airborne, and ground systems.
The Information Technology Division (ITD) carries out research and development in the collection, transmission, assurance, and processing of information to provide Naval and joint warfighting forces with the means to achieve and maintain information dominance in the battlespace. ITD’s Science & Technology (S&T) program encompasses basic research (6.1), substantial applied research and exploratory development (6.2), continuing efforts to field prototypes through advanced technology demonstrations (6.3), advanced component development and prototyping (6.4), and continuous delivery of software-based enhancements for materiel support and sustainment of fielded systems. The program addresses the technological needs of Navy warfighting systems and stakeholders and receives sponsorship from the Office of Naval Research, Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research & Engineering, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Intelligence Community, as well as Department of the Navy (DON) materiel acquisition programs, industrial activities, and congressionally supported programs involving rapid technology prototyping. In addition to its internal program activities, the Division serves NRL specifically and the DON generally as a consulting body of experts in information technology applications. The program further involves interaction and considerable coordination with US Government, industrial, academic, and international counterparts. Read more on the ITD webpage.
The Information Technology Division (ITD) carries out research and development in the collection, transmission, assurance, and processing of information to provide Naval and joint warfighting forces with the means to achieve and maintain information dominance in the battlespace. ITD’s Science & Technology (S&T) program encompasses basic research (6.1), substantial applied research and exploratory development (6.2), continuing efforts to field prototypes through advanced technology demonstrations (6.3), advanced component development and prototyping (6.4), and continuous delivery of software-based enhancements for materiel support and sustainment of fielded systems. The program addresses the technological needs of Navy warfighting systems and stakeholders and receives sponsorship from the Office of Naval Research, Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research & Engineering, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Intelligence Community, as well as Department of the Navy (DON) materiel acquisition programs, industrial activities, and congressionally supported programs involving rapid technology prototyping. In addition to its internal program activities, the Division serves NRL specifically and the DON generally as a consulting body of experts in information technology applications. The program further involves interaction and considerable coordination with US Government, industrial, academic, and international counterparts. Read more on the ITD webpage.
The Space Systems Development Division (SSDD) is the space and ground support systems research and development organization of the Naval Center for Space Technology. The primary objective of the SSDD is to develop command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) hardware and software solutions to space, airborne, and ground applications. To respond to Navy, DoD, and national mission requirements with improved performance, capacity, reliability, efficiency, and/or life cycle costs, the Division must derive system requirements from the mission, develop architectures in response to these requirements, and design and develop systems, subsystems, equipment, and implementation technologies to achieve the optimized, integrated operational space, airborne, and ground systems.
The Space Science Division conducts a broad-spectrum of Research, Development, Test & Evaluation (RDT&E) in solar-terrestrial physics, astrophysics, upper/ middle atmospheric science, and astronomy. Instruments to be flown on satellites, sounding rockets and balloons, and ground-based facilities and mathematical models are conceived and developed. Researchers apply these and other capabilities to the study of the atmospheres of the Sun and Earth, including solar activity and its effects on the Earth’s ionosphere, upper atmosphere, and middle atmosphere; laboratory astrophysics; and the unique physics and properties of celestial sources. The science is important to orbital tracking, radio communications, and navigation that affect the operation of ships and aircraft, utilization of the near-space and space environment of the Earth, and the fundamental understanding of natural radiation and geophysical phenomena.