Showing posts with label Eugene Arthurs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eugene Arthurs. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

SPIE Leaders, Community Speak Out To Support Photonics R&D



Comment period provides opportunity for advocacy of new photonics manufacturing capability
Leaders of SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, have been among those speaking out for the value of light-based technologies through the National Photonics Initiative, including in response to a request for information on a proposal for new manufacturing institutes. A photonics institute for manufacturing innovation would help ensure community safety, generate new high-value jobs, and drive economic growth, society leaders say.
A request for information on possible new manufacturing institutes focused on light-based technologies has offered a valuable opportunity for the community to speak out on how the development of new photonics-based applications benefit the economy and society, say leaders of SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics.
A comment period closed last week for a U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) Request for Information (RFI) to gather input to use in scoping focus areas for future Institutes for Manufacturing Innovation (IMI).
“We have received very positive comments in recent meetings in Washington, D.C., on the response from the photonics community. Individuals’ comments are very powerful, and taken together become an even stronger voice of advocacy for photonics,” said SPIE CEO Eugene Arthurs. “We are pleased that the National Photonics Initiative (NPI) once again has been able to help focus and amplify the efforts of individuals from all segments of the industry.”
The NPI, a collaborative alliance seeking to raise awareness of photonics and drive U.S. funding and investment in key photonics-driven fields, was launched in the wake of shrinking federal budgets for research, and on the recommendation of a 2012 National Academies’ report on optics and photonics. SPIE and The Optical Society (OSA) are Founding Sponsors, and the American Physical Society (APS), the IEEE Photonics Society, and the Laser Institute of America (LIA) are Sponsors of the coalition.
Arthurs noted that the NPI’s advocacy efforts in the U.S. resemble similar initiatives in other regions of the world that have been highly successful in promoting optics and photonics and resulting in important funding opportunities.
In the European Union, efforts by Photonics21, which represents industry and research groups and not-for-profit societies including SPIE, have helped secure photonics a place among six Key Enabling Technologies that receive priority funding for R&D. Previously, photonics had been one of 37 Technology Platforms, with less favored funding.
China, Japan, Germany, Singapore, and Belgium are among countries that have invested heavily in national photonics technology institutes, centers of excellence, and similar initiatives, and gained leadership positions in targeted markets as a result.
In Taiwan, R&D strategy has helped create annual export levels in photonics of around US$80B, more than US$3,500 per resident.
A photonics IMI would ensure defense technology leadership for the future while generating and securing jobs and innovation to drive economic growth, SPIE leaders said.
“To maintain a competitive edge requires a healthy symbiosis of science and technology with manufacturing,” Arthurs said. “This is vital to sustenance and progress for both. Knowledge diffusion, from research to manufacturing and from manufacturing to research, is crucial for ongoing innovation that results in tangible economic or social outcomes.”
“Photonics is an enabling technology used in communications, computing, healthcare, transportation, energy, and entertainment, and plays a vital part in our security and defense capabilities” said SPIE Vice President Robert Lieberman, who serves on the NPI steering committee. “For example, optical sensors, from UV through IR to terahertz, have myriad uses in the ongoing quest for the security of our communities. Sensors have multiple uses in everyday life, such as diagnosing disease, ensuring food safety, monitoring health, and ensuring safety on our streets and highways.”
Economic benefits of innovation fund more than 70% of R&D in the United States, he said, but “without the economic benefits from manufacturing, this funding withers.”
More than 300 people signed up for a webinar organized by the NPI about how to respond to the RFI, and SPIE submitted a letter emphasizing the economic impact of photonics.
In advance of the RFI, SPIE and other NPI partners presented white papers on a national photonics prototyping and advanced manufacturing facility to the Office of Science and Technology Policy and DoD officials. The NPI has also been active in promoting biophotonics, environmental sensors, and high-power laser technologies among federal policy makers in Washington, D.C.
About SPIE
SPIE is the international society for optics and photonics, a not-for-profit organization founded in 1955 to advance light-based technologies. The Society serves nearly 256,000 constituents from approximately 155 countries, offering conferences, continuing education, books, journals, and a digital library in support of interdisciplinary information exchange, professional networking, and patent precedent. SPIE provided more than $3.2M in support of education and outreach programs in 2013.
SOURCE: SPIE

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

2011 Prism Award Finalists Are Announced









http://www.photonicsonline.com/article.mvc/2011-Prism-Award-Finalists-Are-Announced-0001
Industry leaders will honor developers of innovative new products at Photonics West
Finalists have been named in nine categories for the 2011 Prism Awards for Photonics Innovation, sponsored by SPIE and Photonics Media.
Winners will be announced by industry leaders at a gala ceremony on 25 January during SPIE Photonics West in San Francisco. Presenters for the 2011 awards are being confirmed. Past awards have been presented by industry leaders such as Michael Mertin, CEO of JENOPTIK; Robert Edmund, CEO and Chairman of Edmund Optics; Marita Paasch, VP of SCHOTT Advanced Optics; and Milton Chang, Managing Director of the high-tech venture fund Incubic.
The Prism Awards - termed the "Photonics Oscar" by the industry - recognizes photonic products that break with conventional ideas, solve problems, and improve life through the generation and harnessing of light. Finalists and winners are chosen by an independent panel of industry experts.
"The quality and competition among this year's entries was even keener than in past years. More companies submitted applications than ever before. The strength of applications from core companies in our industry along with the impressive innovations bubbling up from smaller companies really demonstrate the vitality of the photonics industry," said SPIE CEO Eugene Arthurs.
"We are very pleased to have this means of bringing visibility and recognition to industry colleagues," Arthurs added. "SPIE and Photonics Media extend our thanks to all who took the time to apply, and also to the judges, who are themselves outstanding contributors to photonics research and technology development. The Prism Awards have truly become a celebration of and for our entire industry."
Seventeen of the finalists will exhibit at the Photonics West exhibition at the Moscone Center in San Francisco 25-27 January. Booth numbers of finalists and their product entries are noted in the alphabetical listing below.
For more information on the awards program, visit www.photonicsprismaward.com.
Defense and Security
  • Headwall Photonics Inc.: Hyperspec RECON Handheld Sensor (Booth 903)
  • Physical Optics Corporation: Mobile ELISA-based Pathogen Detection
  • Zomega Terahertz Corporation: micro-Z (Booth 2511)

Detectors, Sensing, Imaging, and Cameras
  • CyberOptics Semiconductor: WaferSense Airborne Particle Sensor
  • MERMEC: T-Sight 5000
  • Vieworks Co., Ltd.: VN Series Camera Link Camera

Green Photonics and Sustainable Energy
  • Cogenra Solar: Solar Cogeneration Solution
  • nanoplus: DFB laser at 3µm (Booth 2523)
  • Opalux Inc.: P-ink Displays

Industrial Lasers
  • Amplitude Systemes: Satsuma HE (Booth 1431)
  • Spectra-Physics: Mosaic 532-11 Laser (Booth 1301)
  • Xiton Photonics Gmbh: IMPRESS 213 (Booth 1500)

Life Sciences and Biophotonics
  • Coherent: OBIS (Booth 1015)
  • 89 North: Heliophor (Booth 407)
  • Rebellion Photonics, Inc.: The ARROW Hyperspectral Camera

Optics and Optical Components
  • Haas Laser Technologies, Inc.: Thermal Lensing Compensation Objective (Booth 5502)
  • Optotune AG: Laser Speckle Reducer (Booth 5501)
  • PixelOptics Inc.: emPower!

Other Light Sources
  • Intematix: ChromaLit (Booth 506)
  • OEwaves: Ultra-Narrow Linewidth Laser (Booth 4632)
  • Philips Lumileds: Luxeon A

Scientific Lasers
  • KMLabs: Wyvern-X
  • Newport Corporation Spectra-Physics: InSight DeepSee (Booth 1301)
  • Pd-LD Inc.: LabSource- VBG stabilized dual-laser source (Booth 828)

Test, Measurement, Metrology
  • KLA-Tencor: FabVision Solar (Booth 2100)
  • nanoplus: DFB laser at 3µm (Booth 2523)
  • WITec GmbH: True Surface Microsopy
  • Zygo Corporation: DynaFiz (Booth 1230)

About SPIE
SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, was founded in 1955 to advance light-based technologies. Serving more than 180,000 constituents from 168 countries, the Society advances emerging technologies through interdisciplinary information exchange, continuing education, publications, patent precedent, and career and professional growth. SPIE annually organizes and sponsors approximately 25 major technical forums, exhibitions, and education programs in North America, Europe, Asia, and the South Pacific. SPIE provided over $2.3M in support of education and outreach programs in 2010.