Projects
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![A screenshot over the florida panhandle and carribean, with dots in the ocean representing spare salinity monitors.](/sites/default/files/styles/list/public/project/image/2024-03/Salinity%20Profile.png?h=3184aa5c&itok=lMXh1FJq)
Compact Optical Salinity Sensor
We are developing a compact and encapsulated optical salinity sensor to enable more distributed and persistent monitoring of the ocean’s 3D structure.
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![a small electronic chip is illuminated with red laser light.](/sites/default/files/styles/list/public/project/image/2022-06/Atomic-clock.png?itok=pL1cHcWv)
Compact Optical Trapped-Ion Array Clock
Optical atomic clocks are the most accurate in the world, but they are very large, sensitive instruments. We are transforming the complex components of these clocks into a compact, portable platform.
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![a wire in wound up in a spool. The wire appears to be cooper and has red LEDs lit up throughout it.](/sites/default/files/styles/list/public/project/image/2022-05/523546-001D.jpg?itok=o9_O-FTT)
Fiber Sensor Array Buoy
A small, low-cost system that leverages long-length fibers embedded with electronics could provide persistent monitoring of the undersea environment.
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![The Laboratory's advanced work in miniaturized electronics enabled the development of EnteroPhone™.](/sites/default/files/styles/list/public/project/image/2018-04/EnteroPhone_in%20hand.jpg?h=3e00a8a5&itok=peUDma70)
EnteroPhone™
A wireless, ingestible device monitors heart and breathing rates by listening to the body's sounds and senses core temperature, all from within the gastrointestinal tract.
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![Photomicrograph of superconducting single-flux-quantum (SFQ) shift-register integrated circuit fabricated at Lincoln Laboratory.](/sites/default/files/styles/list/public/project/image/2018-03/GOMAC_sc_PCM411_Shift%20Register%2810%29.jpg?itok=6WwXYj2g)
Superconducting Electronics
The world's most advanced single-flux-quantum (SFQ) integrated circuit process has been developed here at Lincoln Laboratory.
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