Transportation Systems- Highway Bridge Standoff Measurement System

Dr. John Keilkopf with the University of Louisville is advancing the science significantly by allowing bridge inspectors to be able to measure instantly structural resonant vibration frequencies of any line-of-sight joint, plate, truss or member at a remote distance. This method is elegantly simple to implement and is comparable to a surveyor setting up a transit at a distance and just aiming to a critical point on the structure or member of interest and measuring its vibration spectrum within seconds.

The Challenge

The task of assuring the security of our homeland involves protecting the citizens of the United States, the nation's critical infrastructure and key assets. This is necessary to sustain the nation's vitality against terrorism and other threats. This protection must originate at the community level. It requires discovering, developing and deploying new technology that will support first responders and key decision makers in local communities.

The Mission

NIHS' mission is to discover, develop and deploy solutions that protect and preserve the critical infrastructure of the nation's communities.

The Institute

NIHS aligns projects and research objectives with the needs and requirements of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The strategy is to manage a distributed research enterprise that effectively transitions research and development into solutions. NIHS works with DHS to determine technology needs at the community level. Then, teams are quickly assembled from multiple universities to develop solutions to the needs.

The Strategy

Through management of the Kentucky Critical Infrastructure Protections Program (KCI), the National Institute for Hometown Security (NIHS) provides an ongoing, integrated program dedicated to developing new technologies and devices. NIHS works through qualified academic institutions to accomplish the technological objectives.