01/22/10
Gene J. Koprowski
from
FOXNews.com
Ray Guns Real: Army Betting Big on Laser Weapons
The military envisions a future of laser warfare -- ultra-precise weapons based
on devastatingly powerful beams of light. It's only a matter of time until the
U.S. Army fights terrorists and other enemy combatants with laser beams,
engaging in battles seen previously only in movies like 'Starship Troopers' and
'Star Trek.'
The U.S. Army is betting big on laser warfare -- designing, testing and
perfecting ultra-precise weapons based on devastatingly powerful beams of light.
And given recent developments, it's only a matter of time until the military has
in its arsenal a weapon that until now has been the staple of science fiction --
the ray gun.
Set your phasers to kill.
Boeing, one of the Pentagon's top contractors, already has a laser weapon that
will improve the military's ability to counter artillery, mortar, drone aircraft
and even rockets, a spokesman tells FoxNews.com.
Boeing's is the highest-profile program of all of the projects under development
for the Department of Defense, and last week it took a step closer to reality.
At its facility in Huntsville, Ala., Boeing accepted a military truck built by
Oshkosh Defense that will carry its laser beam control system into battle.
The device is the cornerstone of a high-priority U.S. Army project, called the
High Energy Laser Technology Demonstrator (HEL-TD), touted as the future of
American war, which will enable the military to fight at the speed of light.
"The system is technically not in production right now," says Marc Selinger, a
spokesman for Boeing's missile defense systems unit in suburban Washington, near
the Pentagon. "Boeing is building only a demonstrator now ... in this case, a
test unit."
That means the project is moving out of the design phase and, with the Oshkosh
Heavy Expanded Military Tactical Truck, into production. The eight-wheel,
500-horsepower HEMTT A4, a widely used military tactical vehicle, is being
tightly integrated with the Boeing rugged beam control system. Suppliers are
already shipping related components to Boeing for assembly.
The weapon will eventually include high-speed processors, optical sensors, and
an array of mirrors. Testing of the device's lethal capacity will begin next
fiscal year at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. In addition to the
U.S. Army, Boeing is developing its laser technologies for the Air Force and
Navy.
A number of new materials enhance the weapon as well, including sapphire
substrates for LEDs, semiconductors, and optics. One Chicago-based supplier,
Rubicon Technology, provides components made of sapphire for military lasers and
sensors.
Lasers are sensitive devices, yet in combat, they will be used in harsh
conditions, including sand and wind storms. Sapphire is the second-hardest
material on earth, next to diamonds, "yet they can be free of imperfections and
perfectly flat," says Beth Hespe, a spokeswoman for Rubicon. The material helps
keep the laser stable -- key to its effectiveness as a weapon.
A Brief History of Laser Guns
For decades, the Army has tried -- and essentially failed -- to develop
alternative weapons that target threats before they can reach ground troops. One
earlier technology was called the Trophy Active Protection System, which in
concept would have fired a shotgun-like blast of pellets at incoming
rocket-propelled grenades and antitank missiles.
Scientists now hope that lasers can do what flying metal cannot.
Dissipating the heat laser beams generate is one problem the military has faced
in its efforts to weaponize lasers, which new, proprietary technology is
overcoming. The technology consists of a laser, a power source and a command and
control element. Development of an effective power source -- something that
could generate enough energy to destroy incoming projectiles -- has been another
key advancement.
At the most fundamental level, laser weapons are based on the concept of
delivering a large amount of stored energy from the weapon to the target, thus
producing structural and incendiary damage effects. A directed energy weapon
delivers its effect at the speed of light, rather than supersonic or subsonic
speeds typical of projectile weapons. The lasers basically obliterate their
targets.
Many scientific, military, medical and commercial applications have incorporated
lasers since their invention in 1958. When the Apollo astronauts landed on the
moon, they planted retroreflector arrays to make possible the Lunar Laser
Ranging Experiment. Laser beams focused through large telescopes on Earth aimed
at the arrays, and scientists measured the time the beam took to reflect to
determined distances with high accuracy. Military uses of lasers include
applications such as targeting and ranging, defensive countermeasures,
communications and directed energy weapons.
The military's tech at present is focused on larger, truck-mounted laser guns.
But as the technology is honed and miniaturized, its easy to imagine a future
with handheld versions of the ray guns -- just like in the movies.
Uses for Laser Beams
Last March, Northrop Grumman announced that its engineers in Redondo Beach,
Calif., had successfully built and tested an electric laser capable of producing
a 100-kilowatt ray of light, powerful enough to destroy cruise missiles. An
electric laser requires much less space for its supporting equipment than a
chemical laser, which is powered by a chemical reaction rather than an
electrical power source.
Lasers are also being used in radar and radio applications by the military.
"They are also playing a leading role in the development of wideband
communications -- wideband essentially being a synonym for delivering broadband
capability to the battlefield," said Jon Alhart, a spokesman for military
contractor Harris Corp. Using lasers and other technologies, the military can
set up broadband networks anywhere radios are conventionally out of range. This
is accomplished wirelessly, over-the-air, without the assistance of gateways or
other ad-hoc networking technologies.
But America's enemies are also exploring laser technology, and the U.S. military
is preparing for that too.
Last week, U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) disclosed $2.4 million in new funding
for Revision Eyewear in Essex Junction, Vt., to make new lenses to protect
soldiers against lasers on the battlefield, according to Jonathan Blansay, CEO
of Revision.
And last year, Leahy secured another $3 million contract for laser protective
eyewear -- more than $10 million since 2005, said Blansay.
It's only a matter of time until lasers form the backbone of many different
aspects of military life, not just warfare.

Loser Light Saber
Meanwhile over at the Air Force:
From Closing Velocity
September 01, 2009
Zapped: Advanced Tactical Laser (ATL) Destroys Ground Vehicle

Advanced Tactical Laser on C-130H
While not a missile defense platform like its big brother Airborne Laser (ABL),
Boeing's other directed energy weapon just scored its first direct hit on a real
target. Mounted on the underbelly a modified C-130H, the Advanced Tactical Laser
(ATL) zapped a ground vehicle while cruising high above White Sands yesterday:
An airborne laser defeated a stationary vehicle in a test Monday, Boeing and the
U.S. Air Force announced Tuesday.
It was the Advanced Tactical Laser aircraft's "first air-to-ground, high-power
laser engagement of a tactically representative target," according to a news
release.
During the test, the C-130H aircraft took off from Kirtland Air Force Base,
N.M., and fired its high-power chemical laser over White Sands Missile Range,
N.M. The beam control system acquired the ground target -- an unoccupied
stationary vehicle -- guided the laser beam and "defeated" the vehicle.
Now, frying a parked truck on the ground is a far cry from destroying a high
velocity ICBM in midflight from several hundred kilometers away, but still... A
laser made a kill. That's pretty historic. And it has the diabolical gears
turning:
As this test proves, the Laser has huge potential as a tool for assassination.
Lasers have the potential to zap individual bad guys without causing the same
kind of collateral damage as a Hellfire missile or small-diameter bomb.
* * * * *

That Advanced Tactical Laser would have been a nice addition to the weapons on board the AC-130 gunships handling traffic control duties on the Ho Chi Minh Trail.