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Grant - II | AliveAbout Angle
Angle is a company that received a Department of Defense SBIR/STTR grant for a project entitled: Target-Ocean Scene Simulator for the Prediction of Electromagnetic Scattering Effects of Sea on the Radar Cross Section (RCS) of Small Boats in Littor. The abstract given for this project is as follows: The objective of this proposal is to demonstrate the feasibility of generating realistic ocean-like ground planes for the RCS prediction of small vessels in both shallow and deepwater environments. Although significant progress has been made in furthering the state-of-the-art in electromagnetic modeling for air and ground environments, predicting target signatures at sea has lagged, in part, due to the problem of modeling the stochastic nature of the ocean surface. This has left analysts predicting the signatures of sea based targets, particularly in cases where shallow look down angles aren't applicable, with the very limited and highly unsatisfactory options of using ground planes with flat or Gaussian based distributions for the modeling of sea surfaces. This proposal outlines an approach to leveraging existing technology under development at Angle Incorporated to model the ocean surface using a highly tessellated grid with a height field perturbed in real time using power spectral density models such as those defined by Pierson- Moskowitz or Hasselman. Moreover, it proposes integrating this technology into an application that also incorporates a physics engine contained in its WaveLore simulator products to model real-time vessel dynamics. With the addition of a CAD geometry import- export capability the real-world dynamic relationship between the ocean surface and the vessel orientation would be captured, providing a revolutionary improvement in predicting the radar cross section of sea-based target data. Angle is a company that received a Department of Defense SBIR/STTR grant for a project entitled: Offboard Refueling Support System for Unmanned Surface Vehicles. The abstract given for this project is as follows: The proposed task creates the design for a robotic system (Unmanned Surface Vessel (USV))to control and conduct unmanned and unsupervised refueling of another USV. The concept uses an optimized boat design, light-weight low profile crane, boom end mounted robotic effector, novel hose end connection and receiver port design, and hierarchical command and control program based on the NIST Real-Time Control System RCS. The proposed work will detail the design concepts, establish the Concept of Operations, create a real-time, first person simulation of the tanker in operation connecting to a customer, and create the functional and architectural definition documents for the command and control and integrated health management systems.
Angle Patents
Angle has filed 34 patents.
The 3 most popular patent topics include:
- Fluid dynamics
- Biotechnology
- Molecular biology

Application Date | Grant Date | Title | Related Topics | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
10/2/2020 | 4/18/2023 | Marine propulsion, Bearings (mechanical), Aerodynamics, SAGE sites, Mechanics | Grant |
Application Date | 10/2/2020 |
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Grant Date | 4/18/2023 |
Title | |
Related Topics | Marine propulsion, Bearings (mechanical), Aerodynamics, SAGE sites, Mechanics |
Status | Grant |
Latest Angle News
Sep 19, 2023
TribLIVE's Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox. For documentary filmmaker Alex Perry, there wasn’t much question that he was interested in making a film about Dormont native, Olympic gold medalist, one-time TV sports anchor and pro wrestler Kurt Angle. “Kurt was my favorite pro wrestler growing up,” Perry said in a phone interview last week. “When I was a kid, I didn’t know about his backstory with the Olympics or anything like that. It was such a rare thing for a wrestler to have their gimmick in wrestling be based on something that happened in their real life. To find out that his gimmick was actually based on a real event and that he won a gold medal with his neck injury, I was blown away, and that made me more of a fan of his.” Perry’s two-hour documentary film, “Angle,” debuted earlier this month on Peacock, nested under both “documentary” and “WWE,” which bought the film after Perry produced it independently between 2018 and 2019 with most of the filming done in Pittsburgh. “It was an excuse for me to meet Kurt basically,” Perry recalled. “We had a blast filming it over two days, and we stayed in touch. I was texting him questions about his life over the next decade. I really thought the first half of his story was very unexplored territory. I probably spent six months trying to convince him to give me his documentary rights.” The film traces Angle’s youth growing up in Dormont and playing football at Mt. Lebanon High School to his wrestling career winning the Olympic gold medal in freestyle wrestling in 1996 and then into his WWE career that spanned 1998-2006 and 2017-19. “Kurt’s story is all about resilience to pain, whether that pain be physical through his injuries, mental through his opioid addiction or emotional through the tragedies that his family has endured,” Perry said. “He’s always had this relentlessness. There’s a line at the beginning of the movie after his dad passed away. (Kurt) says, ‘Just keep moving, just keep moving.’ And that is the theme of Kurt’s whole life.” One aspect of Angle’s story that didn’t make the cut: His brief less-than-stellar stint as a weekend sports anchor on WPGH-TV. “That is the scene that I am so, so sad I couldn’t get in there because I couldn’t find any of the footage,” Perry said. “I found a couple small clips but nothing would have beat those first few nights of seeing him attempt being a broadcaster. He was the worst broadcaster of all time is the way that most people put it. I’m so sad we couldn’t find that.” “Angle” does include footage from WTAE-TV, KDKA-TV (a Jennifer Antkowiak interview) and PCNC and interviews with wrestling stars Stone Cold Steve Austin and Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. “These people love Kurt,” Perry said. “He was good to so many people throughout his life, and it really became this weapon that I had at my disposal. … All these people said yes (to interview requests) almost immediately, and I had very little pushback from anybody. The Rock was one of the easiest to get. He immediately said yes. He’s probably the busiest guy on the planet, so it was unbelievable that he was willing to donate any time whatsoever to talk about Kurt. That just shows how much love and respect (Kurt) has.” The film ends with an update on Angle, who’s been sober for nine years and still resides in the Pittsburgh area where he’s raising his six children. Perry said Angle loved the movie. “He told me he walked into (watching it) with a notebook to take all the notes for changes he wanted (to make) in the film, but he said halfway through it he threw away the notebook and just watched the rest,” Perry said. “He told me he cried and that was a huge moment for me. Prior to the release, if that’s all I got out of making this movie, I would have been satisfied.” Talk shows delay returns
Angle Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Where is Angle's headquarters?
Angle's headquarters is located at 7406 Alban Station Ct. Suite A112, Springfield.
What is Angle's latest funding round?
Angle's latest funding round is Grant - II.
Who are the investors of Angle?
Investors of Angle include U.S. Department of Defense.