American Science and Engineering
| Traded as | NASDAQ: ASEI |
|---|---|
| Industry | Instrumentation |
| Founded | 1958 |
| Headquarters | Billerica, Massachusetts |
| Revenue | $166 million (2010)[1] |
| Employees | 360[1] |
| Website | www.as-e.com |
American Science and Engineering Inc, (AS&E) is a US manufacturer of X-ray equipment and related technologies, originating in 1958 as a developer for NASA, with an early focus on X-ray astronomy led by Riccardo Giacconi.[1] Among other developments Giacconi's team made possible the Einstein Observatory (the first full imaging X-ray telescope, launched 1978), and Giacconi's work at AS&E saw him win the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics.[1]
Among other things, AS&E provides both transmission X-ray and backscatter X-ray equipment for airports, seaports, critical infrastructures, border crossings and other locations where security scanning is required. AS&E has also developed a mobile backscatter X-ray van (ZBV).[2][3]
AS&E is listed on the NASDAQ (ASEI).
Last year, AS&E made $64million profit on $278million revenue.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d AS&E, History
- ^ Forbes, 24 August 2010, Full-Body Scan Technology Deployed In Street-Roving Vans
- ^ Dave Lindorff, CounterPunch, 1 October 2010, Now the Government is X-Raying You While You Drive
External links
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