I have been following this story for a couple of years
now. I really find this exciting. I guess it appeals to the “trekie” in me
because it is the future coming into being.
The Navy will deploy a high-energy, solid-state
directed energy (“laser”) weapon early next year on board the amphibious
transport dock Ponce. This will be the first such deployment of the Navy’s
Laser Weapons System after it completed test shots last summer aboard the
destroyer Dewey. The laser targeted fast boats and unmanned drones in the tests
completed in the Pacific off the California coast.
The Navy has spent $40 million developing the
solid-state laser weapons system over the past six years. That’s remarkably
cheap considering the cost of developing advanced weapons these days.
The laser weapon system began as a developmental
effort by the U.S. Naval Sea Command and the Office of Naval Research.
“The CNO has tasked us to move this capability into
the operational domain,” said Rear Adm. Matthew L. Klunder, Chief of Naval
Research. “This is a new innovative technology to give sailors and Marines the
advantage they need for the current and future fight.”
The idea is to deploy a low-cost, high-energy
effective weapon against a range of potential threats, including enemy drones,
fast-attack boats and what is referred to as small boat swarm attacks wherein
large numbers of small watercraft attack simultaneously.
The laser weapon system uses heat energy from the
laser to destroy targets, Klunder explained. Each round is remarkably cheap
compared to other forms of ammunition.
“One round of directed energy is equivalent to one
U.S. dollar. This is real data for real performance,” Klunder said.
In fact, the laser weapons system can easily
integrate with the electronics on-board Navy ships, most of which produce more
than enough electrical power to support the weapon, said Rear Adm. Thomas J.
Eccles, chief engineer and deputy commander for Naval Systems Engineering.
Thus far, the laser weapons system is a perfect 12
for 12 in test shots, said Eccles. The video below shows a successful test engagement
involving a test-firing of the laser weapon system on board the Dewey. The
weapon successfully incinerated a “dummy” or mock UAS target. The directed
energy power emitted from the laser can be adjusted to lethal and non-lethal
modes — giving ship commanders a range of options when it comes to executing
their missions.
Live Long and Prosper...
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