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About us
For over 50 years, PSI has provided technology solutions and innovative products to our government and commercial customers. Our employee-owners continue to grow the company across a range of markets applying emerging science to important problems. We play an important role in the development and transition of advanced technology from the laboratory to commercial and government use. PSI has a highly interdisciplinary staff with advanced degrees in chemistry, biology, physics and applied physics, electrical, aeronautical, and mechanical engineering, and materials science. We are structured to enable cross-disciplinary collaboration between our scientists and engineers in order to develop solutions to our customers’ technical problems. Our extensive laboratory and prototyping facilities as well as low rate production capability enable us to rapidly go from concept to advanced prototype, and then on to manufacturing. We couple this internal capability with our long heritage in field and clinical testing of prototype systems enabling us to gain valuable feedback leading to rapid improvement.
- Website
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http://www.psicorp.com
External link for Physical Sciences Inc.
- Industry
- Research Services
- Company size
- 201-500 employees
- Headquarters
- Andover, MA
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 1973
- Specialties
- Laser Based Sensing, Materials, Optics, Passive Sensing, Chemistry, Signal Processing, and Engineering
Locations
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Primary
20 New England Business Center Drive
Andover, MA 01810, US
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6652 Owens Drive
Pleasanton, CA 94588, US
Employees at Physical Sciences Inc.
Updates
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🚨 Massachusetts small businesses are speaking out. Last week, Senate Small Business Committee Ranking Member Ed Markey hosted a listening session with local entrepreneurs and innovators to share firsthand how innovation funding cuts and reckless tariff policies are impacting their ability to grow, hire, and compete. These conversations are critical reminders: when federal policies undermine small businesses, it’s not just companies that suffer—it’s workers, communities, and the future of American innovation. 👉 Read more about the voices and stories that were shared: https://lnkd.in/e44NjeKi
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The INNOVATE Act (S. 853), introduced by Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA) and Roger Williams (R-TX), significantly undermines the merit-based approach in SBIR and STTR that have been so successful in developing critical technologies for the warfighter, space exploration, and the healthcare professional. If enacted without critical modifications, SBIR funding would be nearly exclusively captured by established, well-funded, VC-backed companies that will exploit the SBIR program for taxpayer money to leverage VC investments.
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The New England Innovation Alliance (NEIA), an organization of entrepreneurial companies focused on transitioning innovative technologies to government and commercial use, strongly opposes the INNOVATE Act. The legislation, introduced by Senators Joni Ernst (R-IA) and Representative Roger Williams (R-TX), Chairs of the Senate and House Small Business Committees, would reauthorize the Small Business Innovation Research and Technology Transfer (SBIR/STTR) programs. The INNOVATE Act is a direct attack on the longstanding competitive, merit-based approach to the program and a give-away of hundreds of millions of dollars annually in non-dilutive capital to venture capital interests.
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The New England Innovation Alliance (NEIA), a coalition of small, disruptive innovation businesses located in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, strongly supports The SBIR and STTR Reauthorization Act of 2025 introduced by Senator Edward Markey, Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, and Representative Nydia Velázquez, Ranking Member of the House Small Business Committee.
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Physical Sciences Inc. reposted this
"Set to expire September 30, 2025, the SBIR/STTR programs have delivered a strong return on investment, spurred over $54 billion in awards, and sustained more than 1.5 million jobs. Within the Department of Defense, the programs have yielded a 22-to-1 return while strengthening national security."
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Capping SBIR awards could cripple defense innovation. Former Navy SBIR director Robert Smith explains why cutting out experienced small firms risks national security — and what Congress is getting wrong. https://lnkd.in/g7Q7ZMWk
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Physical Sciences Inc. reposted this
In his paper, “Strategic Options for the DoD SBIR Program,” Robin Gaster of Incumetrics provides a detailed analysis on the important role of multi award winners within the DoD SBIR program. Learn more below: