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INReview INReview > The Scuttlebutt Lounge > Medicine, Science & Technology > Military and Weaponry Technology > U.S. conducts successful test of anti-ballistic missile laser
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Sean Kelly
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U.S. conducts successful test of anti-ballistic missile laser post #1  quote:



quote:

SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Monday, November 15, 2004
The United States has reported a successful ground-based test of an airborne laser meant to intercept ballistic missiles.

The Missile Defense Agency said the megawatt-class laser underwent a successful test on Nov. 10. The Pentagon agency said the laser was operated in a ground-based demonstration at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.

Officials said this marked the first time that a directed energy weapon meant for use in a Boeing 747 aircraft has been demonstrated.

The test, which lasted a fraction of a second, involved the simultaneous firing of all six laser modules and associated optics that comprise the Chemical Oxygen Iodine Laser. Officials said the modules,built by Northrop Grumman, performed as expected.

Officials said the test was conducted in the framework of the Airborne Laser project. "It was the first time that multiple modules of the powerful laser had ever been fired while linked together as a single unit," the Missile Defense Agency said in a statement on Nov. 10. "In the test, the laser light produced by the six modules was fired into a wall of metal called a calorimeter or beam dump. The temperature rise of the metal was used to validate that laser power was generated."

The ABL program has undergone a two-year delay in wake of the failure to develop a laser weapon that could be fitted into the nose of a Boeing 747-400F aircraft. The Pentagon has acknowledged that the laser system developed in 2002 was too heavy for flight.

The ABL, a program expected to reach $4 billion through 2008, has been designed to autonomously detect, track and destroy enemy ballistic missiles.

The high-power laser was meant to focus a basketball-sized spot of heat that can destroy a missile in the boost-phase of launch at a range of hundreds of kilometers.

Officials said the ABL was meant to intercept ballistic missiles from such countries as Iran and North Korea. Israel has expressed interest in the ABL and was said to be seeking to cooperate with the United States in a scaled-down version of the program.

The Nov. 10 test was said to have verified the integration, operation and control of six laser modules in flight configuration. Officials said the laser would be installed in the 747, integrated with the beam control/fire control system and eventually tested in flight.

Officials said the ABL prototype, termed YAL-1A, has resumed preparations for its first flight test. In December 2002, the aircraft was removed from service for modifications to the airframe to ensure the installation of the laser beam control system.

In early 2005, officials said, the ABL Track Illuminator Laser and Beacon Illuminator Laser would be installed. This would be followed by a flight of the YAL-1A that would include the test of the full beam control system.

At a later stage, the Chemical Oxygen Iodine Laser would be installed on the Boeing 747, followed by additional ground and flight tests. Officials said no date has been set for the first ABL attempt to intercept a ballistic missile.


I must say.. this technology sounds staggeringly powerful. It's mind-boggling to be able to project enough laser energy to maintain that kind of power level across HUNDREDS of kilometers. Futhermore, such weaponry, perhaps even smaller versions, mounted for use by mobile infantry.. could decimate enemy troops and facilities without ever firing a single round of standard, explosive charge ammunition.

I am also a bit concerned about the possible premature deployment of such technology. It is likely that the system uses some form focusing and/or aiming system that allows the target to be acquired and focused upon. My concern is that early testing could easily reveal crucial failures in this system and end up frying civilian targets on the ground from a range of hundreds of kilometers. And if the thing is supposed to automatically detect, acquire targeting and destroy ballistic missiles, who is going to test it's ability to succcesfully reject 100% of false positives to where the thing starts accurately picking out and destroying targets, but where the targets indeed should not have been targets?

Dangerous, dangerous stuff because it travels at the speed of light. This is the most responsive weapon we have ever had in our posession.



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Old Post 11-15-2004 06:07 PM
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post #2  quote:

U.S. airborne laser advances to 'First Light'
quote:
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- A Boeing Co.-led team has successfully fired for the first time a powerful laser meant to fly aboard a modified 747 as part of a U.S. ballistic missile defense shield, officials said on Friday.
(...)
"It showed they work," said Kenneth Englade, an agency spokesman, of the laser's six identical, pickup-truck-sized, modules linked to fire as a single unit. "The rest is fine-tuning."



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Old Post 11-19-2004 11:22 PM
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post #3  quote:

DAMN that thing's impressive!


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Old Post 12-07-2004 06:01 PM
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adityamahesh
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post #4  quote:

Anyone else reminded of phasers?

M.



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Old Post 12-12-2004 10:08 PM
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post #5  quote:

No stun setting on these ones, though...


"Logic dictates, but nobody's listening..."
Old Post 12-12-2004 10:12 PM
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post #6  quote:

True. More like disruptors.

M.



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Old Post 12-12-2004 10:15 PM
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post #7  quote:

quote:
Heavens11 said this in post #6 :

An artist's conception shows an airborne laser system being fired at a missile during its ascent.


Wow - even the artist conceptualizes the targeting system as being way off base. Note how the missle is quite safely below the beam? In order for this thing to work, it requires sustained, prolonged exposure in one spot near the warhead to make it blow. Momentary contact won't cut it.

Phasers? No, I'm reminded more of Storm Troopers who never seem able to hit their mark.



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Old Post 12-13-2004 06:13 PM
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