Company Profile

Visidyne Inc
Profile last edited on: 10/29/2015      CAGE: 63114      UEI: KZUDSY391NA4

Business Identifier: Optical metrology, engineering design and sensor development
Year Founded
1969
First Award
1983
Latest Award
2011
Program Status
Inactive
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Location Information

111 South Bedford Street Suite 103
Burlington, MA 01803
   (781) 273-2820
   jwc@visidyne.com
   www.visidyne.com
Location: Multiple
Congr. District: 06
County: Middlesex

Public Profile

Visidyne Inc, located in the Greater Boston Area with satellite offices in Huntsville, AL and Santa Barbara, CA., was originally formed by members of American Science and Engineering to preform scientific studies and modeling of infrared backgrounds in the upper atmosphere resulting from high-altitude nuclear detonations. At the beginning Visidyne built unique infrared and vacuum ultraviolet sensors for measuring the atmospheric effects of these high altitude nuclear tests. Many of the early employees who joined Visidyne had participated in the atmospheric nuclear tests of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Visidyne has since been working on is known as the Russian American Observational Satellite program, or RAMOS, and supports the International Cooperative Technology Experiments under the Missile Defense Agency (MDA). RAMOS is a cooperative R&D program between the United States and Russia that has both defensive capabilities, like early warning and missile tracking, alongside environmental-related objectives, such as hurricane prediction and monitoring of environmental disasters. The space borne platforms for this work consist of a pair of satellites providing stereo views of selected areas of the earth in order to accurately track rockets. The firm also develops infrared instrumentation used for various government and military applications for laboratory, field and space measurements and provide atmospheric optics R&D services. Other currently-active government-sponsored technology developments include: A 3D imaging camera using lidar-based phase-derived range and an active focal plane array being developed by MIT/Lincoln Laboratory. This technology could form the basis for real time sniper location; An ultrasensitive, pico tesla-level, magnetic sensor that does not require cryogenic components; and Polarization modeling of clouds and aerosols.• Atmospheric modeling (cloud transmission and scattering phenomena, cloud thermal and solar scatter radiance, polarization effects); Remote sensing (satellite, balloons, aircraft, and ground platforms); Space physics (satellite sensors and orbital mechanics); Nuclear and atmospheric effects (infrared and visible emissions and ionization concentrations); Electro-optical systems and sensors (ground, airborne, balloon and satellite platforms); Space-based sensors (visible and infrared push brooms, multi-color imagers, and polarization sensors); Precision stabilized balloon borne pointing and tracking systems and payloads; and Optically based measurements (magnetic, mechanical, and optical sensors)

Extent of SBIR involvement

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Synopsis: Awardee Business Condition

Employee Range
50-74
Revenue Range
5M-7.5M
VC funded?
No
Public/Private
Privately Held
Stock Info
----
IP Holdings
20-24

Awards Distribution by Agency

Most Recent SBIR Projects

Year Phase Agency Total Amount
2011 1 DOE $149,896
Project Title: Cloud Microphysical Properties from Stellar Aureole Measurements
2007 1 Navy $79,739
Project Title: A Passive, Rugged, Fiber Optic Catapult Elongation Sensor
2006 2 MDA $1,349,541
Project Title: Application of Infrared Sensors to Early Launch Detection Through Clouds
2006 2 AF $1,656,268
Project Title: Advanced Concept Exploitation for Surveillance (ACES)
2006 2 MDA $549,224
Project Title: Efficient Radiation Transport Algorithms Using GPU Technology

Key People / Management

  A T Stair -- President

  John Atkinson -- Director of Engineering

  John W Bates -- Chief Financial Officer; Treasurer

  Michael J Berrigan

  John W Carpenter -- Former President

  Gil Davidson -- Chief Operating Officer

  John G Devore -- Senior Project Scientist

  Alfred Ducharme

  Robert J Jordano -- Vice President

  Thomas Keneshea

  Steven H Langer

  Patrick J McNicholl

  William P Reidy

  Ronald J Rieder

  Ken Sartor -- Senior Project Scientist

  Orr Shepherd

  Robert A Skrivanek

  Henry J P Smith

  Christian Trowbridge -- Principal Investigator

  Geert J Wyntjes -- Senior Staff Scientist

  Theodore F Zehnpfenniq