Nuke sensors to get upgrade

SAIC wins contract to modernize the global network of sensors used to detect nuclear testing anywhere in the world

The global network of sensors used to detect nuclear testing anywhere in

the world is being modernized to take advantage of recent technological

advances.

The Air Force on Monday awarded a $50 million contract to Science Applications

International Corp. to upgrade and sustain existing sensors and possibly

to install new ones. The contract will cover the first six years of a 10-year

program that could be worth up to $120 million.

The network of sensors has been in place since the 1960s and has been

upgraded before, but even some of the upgrades are up to eight years old — an advanced age for information technology, according to Tom Bache, SAIC's

senior vice president in charge of the program.

The network is made up mostly of seismic sensors similar to those used

for detecting earthquakes. But it must be sensitive enough to distinguish

between a nuclear explosion and the approximately 50 earthquakes that occur

throughout the world each day.

In addition to seismic sensors, the network includes hydroacoustic sensors

on ocean floors and infrasound sensors, which monitor sounds at frequencies

lower than the human ear can detect.

Bache said the program might be worth up to $120 million, depending

in part on whether international test ban treaties and the U.S. military

budget allow for the planned installation of four new seismic array sites.

"This is a contract with a lot of uncertainties," Bache said.

The contract is expected to include 29 major upgrades, installation

of the four new seismic array sites and maintenance of the network.