Technical Research and Analysis Services

The Defense Systems Information Analysis Center (DSIAC) is a component of the U.S. Department of Defense’s (DoD's) Information Analysis Center (IAC) enterprise.

What We Do

As a DoDIAC, we provide a number of resources and services to help you in your research and provide you with focused expert assistance and unbiased scientific and technical information.

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Recent Inquiries

What information exists on using thermate grenades underwater against mines or limpets?

What information exists on using thermate grenades underwater against mines or limpets?

What DoD efforts have explored task-based and psychophysiological-based adaptive aids for human machine teaming in the last four years?

What U.S. Department of Defense efforts have explored task-based and psychophysiological-based adaptive aids for human machine teaming in the last four years?

What information is available on aircraft maneuvering to avoid a debris cloud caused by a cruise missile explosion?

What information is available on aircraft maneuvering to avoid a debris cloud caused by a cruise missile explosion?

Articles

U.S. Department of Defense to Expand Manufacturing of Printed Circuit Board Assemblies for Hypersonic Weapons

The U.S. Department of Defense announced an award of $11.7 million via the Defense Production Act Investment (DPAI) Program to Ensign-Bickford Aerospace & Defense (EBAD) that will provide additional printed circuit board assembly (PCBA) production…

U.S. Army weapons testing in Alaska

Next Generation Squad Weapon Tested at Army’s Cold Regions Test Center

FORT GREELY, Alaska — It is vital that military equipment work wherever in the world American Soldiers need it, and extreme cold is a weather condition troops have had to contend with frequently in American…

PNNL's new method of monitoring corrosion offers higher resolution and better reliability. (Composite image by Melanie Hess-Robinson | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory)

Understanding Corrosion to Enable Next-Generation Metals

Researchers are using new, experimental techniques like Shear Assisted Processing and Extrusion (ShAPE™) and friction stir welding to produce metal components that are lighter, stronger, and more precise than ever before. But as we enter…

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