U.S. Navy laser weapon performing beyond expectations

spaminator

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U.S. Navy laser weapon performing beyond expectations
David Alexander, Reuters
First posted: Wednesday, December 10, 2014 10:00 PM EST | Updated: Wednesday, December 10, 2014 11:35 PM EST
WASHINGTON - A laser weapon deployed aboard the USS Ponce in the Gulf has performed beyond expectations in four months of operational testing, the chief of Navy research said on Wednesday, lifting hopes for a new U.S. defense against cheap anti-ship arms.
Rear Admiral Matthew Klunder, head of the Office of Naval Research, said the $40 million laser weapon was fully integrated into systems aboard the USS Ponce at the end of the summer for a year of testing.
"This is the first time in recorded history that a directed energy weapons system has ever deployed on anything," he said.
New video of the 30-kilowatt laser showed it dazzling a small aerial drone in two seconds, frying its electronics and sending it plummeting into the sea before it had time to catch fire.
Another showed it targeting a hard-to-see rocket-propelled grenade aboard a small, distant attack boat, causing the device to detonate and send a spray of shrapnel across the water.
"We're not testing it any more. This is operational. It's on a ship in the Persian Gulf," Klunder said. "This isn't something we've got in a box we're saving for ... a special moment. They're using it every single day."
The deployment of the weapon comes as the Pentagon is concerned about losing the technological edge that has enabled it to rapidly overcome rivals on the battlefield for decades.
Many countries are developing precision munitions, long-range missiles and other systems to counter U.S. superiority. China, Iran and other nations have developed accurate anti-ship missiles to force the U.S. Navy to operate further from their shores.
The Navy laser lifts hopes for a more powerful 100-150 kw system able to deliver a jolt of energy that could destroy a multimillion-dollar missile for about a dollar, giving the U.S. military an asymmetric edge in countering anti-ship threats.
The more powerful laser is under development and expected to be deployed on a ship by 2017, Klunder said, adding that if effective, it could be widely produced and deployed on ships.
While the current laser aboard the Ponce has not yet engaged an actual threat to the vessel, it has been tested against the kind of targets it is expected to counter.
"That's all worked well. As a matter of fact, we've never missed," Klunder said. "If we have to defend that ship today, we will destroy a threat if it comes inbound."
In this November 16, 2014 US Navy handout image the Afloat Forward Staging Base (Interim) USS Ponce (ASB(I) 15) conducts an operational demonstration of the Office of Naval Research (ONR)-sponsored Laser Weapon System (LaWS) while deployed to the Gulf. AFP PHOTO / HANDOUT / US NAVY / JOHN F. WILLIAMS / RELEASED

U.S. Navy laser weapon performing beyond expectations | U.S. Navy | World | News
 

MHz

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Hate to break it to you but targeting a few speed boats and a drone isn't going to help you when the incoming is coming at hypersonic speed. Then there is that 'line of sight thing' when weapons of today are fired from over the horizon. Make a great weapon for control of civilians though.
 

B00Mer

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Hate to break it to you but targeting a few speed boats and a drone isn't going to help you when the incoming is coming at hypersonic speed. Then there is that 'line of sight thing' when weapons of today are fired from over the horizon. Make a great weapon for control of civilians though.

hypersonic speed vs speed of light.. lets see who wins.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=StC9nRB_AVY

Guess all those rockets Hamas launches at Israel won't make it to the targets now.. :)

US Navy laser cannon shoots down drone in latest test
 

Blackleaf

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The Yanks are way behind. Royal Navy ships were equipped with laser weapons during the Falklands War.

Come on, old fellows. Do try to keep up.
 

MHz

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hypersonic speed vs speed of light.. lets see who wins.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=StC9nRB_AVY

Guess all those rockets Hamas launches at Israel won't make it to the targets now.. :)

US Navy laser cannon shoots down drone in latest test
A forest, on an ocean, come on guys, urban combat, civil unrest.
Guys, when your woodie softens up that was on a boat sitting in calm water shooting at a boat going at water-skier speed, more like a JFK head shot 10/10 and no holes in the car kind of weapon rather than something that is going to make Iran surrender in vast numbers. The 'troops' would deploy the hunter/killer drones and they would be mission ignorant. Can hardly wait for the start.
The 200MPH torpedoes are countered how? (let alone aiming when the boat is at full throttle and full rudder
Remember all the tanks Saudi needed to hold of the heathen hoards, seems that stuff is **** against planes but wonderful if the citizens bitch about just about anything. Apply the word tank for hammer and every problem looking like a nail saying and that is there solution, send in a tank and shoot somebody quickly, and then shoot a bunch more slowly, again using a tank. The motors used to aim the 'narrow beam' can't follow something changing direction while at hypesonic speed. Like I said, great crow control weapon, effective as a tank and the local place does suffer the tank shell kind of damage. Ships by 2020, local neighborhood by 2015, only option to Russia deploying the S-500 in 2015, 3 weeks from now. Put the drone operators on land and they are alraedi trained, just need deployment, rather mission to fly. I assume an Ebola flesh eating disease would be the morgue's view of things, helps explain the melted eyes part.

That would be great, beam of light rather than an interceptor rocket (sorry projectile as not all are self powered) Want to bet in the next round the number Hamas doesn't launch is equal to the number that Israel launched in the last campaign.

Just imagine the whispers if ISIS and Israel came to a 7 year peace plan, you just know somebody is going to have to ride to the rescue when that goes south, lol.
 

Blackleaf

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At the time of the Falklands War in 1982, there was a persistent rumour, even an open secret in defence circles, of laser weapons being used by the Royal Navy during hostilities. The loss of several Argentine fighters was attributed to lasers designed to dazzle pilots, and one instance was put forward where the pilot saw a glaring light before going down. However, the British were keeping quiet about it.

But now, recently-declassified documents confirm at least part of the story. A letter from then Defence Secretary Michael Heseltine, dated 17th January 1983, states that a medium-power laser weapon was deployed with the task force.

The letter states, "You may recall, however, that we developed and deployed with great urgency a naval laser weapon, designed to dazzle low flying Argentine pilots attacking ships, to the Task Force in the South Atlantic. This weapon was not used in action and knowledge of it has been kept to a very restricted circle."

According to Heseltine in the letter, Britain had been looking into laser weapons since the laser's invention in the early 1960s and in 1974 a British program was set up to assess laser damage and propagation effects.

The outcome of these studies in 1979 was that Britain’s interests were better served by medium-range lasers against soft targets, such as eyes, optics and electro-optic sensors.

There aren't many details on the laser deployed during the Falklands War, but it’s likely to be the Laser Dazzle System (LDS), specifically designed for use against aircraft sensors and pilots. According to defence expert Norman Friedman writing in The Naval Institute Guide to World Naval Weapons Systems, 1997-1998, this was very likely a manual device relying on binoculars for aiming, though by the 1990s there were reports of ones on fixed motorised mounts and operating in the near-IR wavelengths to counter lens coatings and anti-laser goggles.

Exactly which Royal Navy ships carried the lasers isn't certain, but they may have been on frigates, amphibious assault ships, or the two aircraft carriers in the 127-ship task force.


Centaur-class aircraft carrier HMS Hermes may have been one of the Royal Navy ships equipped with a laser weapon during the Falklands War


Source: The National Archives (PDF) via BBC
 
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