Directed Energy Weapon Downs Ballistic Missile 297
A**masher writes "In a test off the Califoria coast late last night, Boeing's Airborne Laser successfully destroyed a sub-launched ballistic missile. 'This was the first directed energy lethal intercept demonstration against a liquid-fuel boosting ballistic missile target from an airborne platform,' reported the Missile Defense Agency. It should be noted that destroying a liquid-fueled ballistic missile is generally considered easier than killing a solid-fueled equivalent due to the relative fragility of the fueling and other systems."
Popcorn and other practical applications (Score:5, Funny)
Some people may worry that a laser this powerful could be used to build some sort of spaced-based precision bomber. But don't worry, you'd have to get someone to build you optics for a phase conjugate target tracking system to do something like that. And no one is stupid enough to do that without realizing the implications.
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Let's be practical. As of today, if we want to take out an enemy threat, we send a big ol' bomb after them. If they happen to have surrounded themselves with 20 innocent people, collateral damage ensues. This is acceptable to pretty much everyone (except maybe the loved ones of the innocents who died.) Even if this system were to be put into use as a single-fire human target eliminator, it would be replacing a tool that is far less 'evil'.
Oh, and I know you and the GP were trying to be funny, Real Geniu
Re:*more* evil (Score:3, Informative)
Even if this system were to be put into use as a single-fire human target eliminator, it would be replacing a tool that is far more 'evil'.
fixed that for me
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Re:Popcorn and other practical applications (Score:4, Funny)
*****VIOLATION*****
YOU ARE IN VIOLATION OF STATUTE 105B OF THE GEEK CODE.
YOU ARE HEREBY DIRECTED TO VIEW 'REAL GENIUS' WITHIN 30 DAYS OR YOU MUST FORFEIT YOUR GEEK CARD AT THE NEAREST FRY'S ELECTRONICS, COMPUSA, OR RADIO SHACK.
In the immortal words of Socrates (Score:2)
"I drank what?"
You can't call yourself a geek if you haven't seen Real Genius. Next he will tell us he's never seen Blade Runner or Forbidden Planet. Sheesh.
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It's a joke, man. Real geeks do whatever the hell they want to do. Being obsessive about weird shit even other types of geeks don't get is, well, one of the primary characteristics of geekhood.
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******VIOLATION*******
PLEASE HAND IN YOUR GEEK CARD! You should have known that "RADIO SHACK" is now called only "THE SHACK"!!
Re:Popcorn and other practical applications (Score:5, Insightful)
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Until some president thinks that he just might be able to get away with starting a nuclear war. Then it will all be all collateral damage. The cold war ugly as it is, has kept the peace better than any thing else we have come up with so far.
I would feel a lot better about this if so many American politicians weren't chomping at the bit start more and more wars and the citizens didn't keep voting for them.
Re:Popcorn and other practical applications (Score:5, Interesting)
Either way, your arguments do not change the fact that American military policy is to reduce collateral damage, and that these weapon advances help in that regard.
Re:Popcorn and other practical applications (Score:5, Informative)
Everyone needs a hobby. If he's parroting idiocy, so be it. It's better than SOME hobbies he might take up. Peeping Tom, for instance . . .
Anyway, on subject - I was more impressed with what I've seen of THEL http://www.missilethreat.com/missiledefensesystems/id.63/system_detail.asp [missilethreat.com]
That link is as good a place as any to start, if you're interested in it.
With a military background, I was moderately impressed when it destroyed a missile. Only moderately, because we routinely shot down our own Tartar missiles when they turned around, and targeted US!
They, they shot down artillery rounds. Without finding the video I watched, I can't recall the size of the artillery rounds, but they were fairly large, fairly slow, with long trajectories that were easy to plot with the computing power available to THEL.
The real stunner was when THEL destroyed a series of mortars. Quite small, and hard to see, let alone track. Relatively short flight time, compared to most missiles or artillery, despite the fact that mortars are quite in comparison.
The video I saw were little more than several cuts pasted together - you didn't get a real "feel" for the hardware, because so much was left out, or edited out. The (intended) impression was that THEL was able to knock each of these successive targets out of the air, with little to no effort.
No matter whether that intended impression is true or not - what THEL did do was impressive. Shooting down a Tartar missile was a minor challenge, one that we pulled off because we ALWAYS tracked it with the guns, from launch to target. We anticipated it turning on us. Incoming artillery or mortars would have been way beyond your capabilities. Incoming missile under real life combat conditions? We'd probably shoot 99's - meaning we would probably get a bunch, but one would eventually get past the guns.
(BTW - I'm talking about 5 inch 54 caliber main guns on a destroyer - not those close in defense systems that ships have today.)
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Can I get a *Woosh*? ;)
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Yeah, it would take a Real Genius not to spot that reference.
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How about naked with a bowl of jello?
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***Some people may worry that a laser this powerful could be used to build some sort of spaced-based precision bomber.***
Rather the reverse doncha think? Might be a dandy tool for shooting holes in space-based military systems.
There's a difference between controlling the high ground and climbing a tree. It's always seemed to me that putting weapons in space was sort of the equivalent of climbing a tree with a sack full of grenades then watching a tank haul over the horizon with a large chain saw mounted o
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Tank. Chain saw. Alright, I might accept a bulldozer blade, because it's been done. But, a chainsaw? Come on - - - -
As for the grenades - I'd rather just have some crowbars. I'm sure you know about XKCD - there are many drawings of those space crowbars. Kinetic energy is pretty awesome - no need to carry around all those explosive charges, putting yourself at risk.
Wrong Platform (Score:5, Funny)
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The sharks aren't big enough, I think our only chance is to put those in a whale.
Star Trek had it all wrong, the humpback whales didn't go extinct because they're so tasty, nono, they went extinct because we were putting friggin laser beams in them.
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I beg to differ. We know they're out there. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mega_Shark_Versus_Giant_Octopus [wikipedia.org]
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Dude you rock!
The Nuclear Fail Whale!
Yikes Comrades! they set us up the Fail Whale!
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And what exactly is wrong with putting it on a whale shark [wikipedia.org]? Is 10+ meters and 20+ tonnes not big enough for you?
Unfortunately (Score:4, Insightful)
these demonstrations aren't exactly peer reviewed.
Not many people doubt that a directed energy weapon can, under the right conditions, shoot down a ballistic missile. The question is whether we'll see on, in our lifetime, shoot down a ballistic missile under realistic conditions. Then being able to that reliably enough.
I'm not doctrinally against developing directed energy weapons, or even anti-missile systems, especially boost-phase systems. But there's been too much fakery and even downright fraud in these programs for me to lend much credence to any "breakthroughs".
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I really doubt there will be a war with Taiwan, if China starts something the first thing the US will do is say "Yeah, about that $1T we owe you"
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Taiwan's status is undetermined. It is claimed by two rival governments, the People's Republic of China (the Communist mainland government) and the Republic of China, the former government of the whole shebang that fled to Taiwan in 1949 and has since become democratic. The US recognizes the PRC, but not its claim over Taiwan; even a number of states that recognize the PRC's claim on an official basis have strong military/political ties to Taiwan, such as South Korea, Singapore, and Japan. The PRC would los
Internal consumption not external (Score:2)
Actually the more salient point is that it is being done while defence spending cuts are being considered. Propaganda is a common method to make sure some one else's project gets cancelled and not yours.
That's just super! We're safe! (Score:2)
Summary Inaccurate (Score:2, Interesting)
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It doesn't really matter but why can't they launch liquid fuel rockets?
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It wasn't launched from a sub. The caustic nature of the fuel combined with the complexity of the launch systems make them both unreliable and incredibly dangerous. In fact Sea Launch almost had to write off their entire mobile launch platform because a turbopump got clogged during a launch causing a rather large explosion.
I don't believ
Pink submarine (Score:2, Interesting)
I always wondered, would a laser be defeated if you gave the missile a mirror paint coat?
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If you can create a perfect mirror, which can also stand temperatures of reentry into atmosphere without losing reflective quality, then yes. But we live in a real world and mirrors are not perfect and are not that tough. They don't deflect 100% of light. High power laser beam will melt mirror. Mirror might reflect laser for some really short period of time. Once mirror starts melting, it will stop deflecting laser.
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Depends on how good the mirror coating is. No mirror is perfect, so it will absorb some of the energy. If the coating starts to degrade, then you get a runaway reduction in effectiveness until the coating's vapourised. Whether that's on a short enough timescale for the laser to score a hit is the real question.
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Probably not for long, because mirrors are far from perfect and any dust particles on the missile would also heat up rapidly and as it heats heats up the reflection ability will likely be soon lost.
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Hell, combine both methods!
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I thought missiles already rotated in flight, for stability...
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Re:Pink submarine (Score:4, Informative)
Unlikely. It needs to be a front surface mirror, or else the laser will simply take effect in whatever (glass or plastic) makes up the front portion of the mirror. Even if it is a front surface mirror, such mirrors are very susceptible to scratches, dings, oxidation, and other damage that will render it vulnerable. Even minor amounts of corrosion or staining (invisible to the naked eye) can compromise the protection the mirror provides and you can't put a protective coating on the mirror to protect it from such...
Not to mention that such a delicate and vulnerable coating is incompatible with the handling and operational environment of the battlefield missiles the ABL is designed to work against.
And, before anyone asks, pretty much the same is true of spinning the missile. Spinning introduces a whole host of significant problems for the missile designer.
Re:Pink submarine (Score:4, Informative)
It's not so much about being "mirror-like" (polished), but rather about being "white" (reflective). The thing is, nothing reflects 100% of the incoming light - even the reflectivity of pure alumin[i]um's [wikipedia.org]is slightly above 90% for visible light, dips to 85% around 850 nm (near IR), and bounces back to perhaps 97% in the micrometer range (which is what some big lasers give out if I'm not mistaken).
Still, 97% is a lot of wasted energy, and thus the need for high energies and huge lasers on ginormous shar^H^H^H^H planes. But perhaps light is perhaps the only thing that can reliably hit a speeding missile.
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always wondered, would a laser be defeated if you gave the missile a mirror paint coat?
Did you ever bother to look up an answer? I know people who work on weapon systems. The first thing they do is consider potential countermeasures.
There's no such thing as a perfectly reflecting mirror. *Some* energy will be absorbed, and with no place to go, will vaporize the mirror coating, probably within a fraction of a second at these power levels.
But if the enemy wants to coat their missile with a bright, shiny (read: easily tracked) coating, I wouldn't complain. Hell, I'd sell them the paint.
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Already Obsolete (Go Navy!) (Score:5, Informative)
The problem with the ABL is that it is a chemical laser based system and as such it is almost already obsolete in the laboratory. Chemical lasers have huge logistical problems and can only fire so many shots, and require huge space, which is why the ABL has cost a fortune and requires a 747.
The future really belongs to the Free Electron Laser, which is making leaps and bounds. If we were to wave the mantra of intraservice rivalries around, then one should say that while the US Navy has had an awful time actually building ships, they've pretty much been whipping on the US Air Force when it comes to both aircraft and lasers and missile defense systems.
Jefferson labs has pushed a Free Electron laser to 14kw.
http://www.jlab.org/fel/ [jlab.org]
And, the US Navy has Raytheon has been awarded a contract for a 100KW Free Electron Laser
http://raytheon.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=43&item=1292&pagetemplate=release [mediaroom.com]
And indeed, some are noting that it will soon be possible to carry these things in the nose of a fighter aircraft, not just a 747.
Re:Already Obsolete (Go Navy!) (Score:5, Informative)
I have no doubt that FELs will eventually surpass chemical lasers for this sort of application, but right now they're nowhere near ready for this sort of application. And if you think back the 15 years or so to when this project was conceived, they were even less ready. I'm sure the upgrade to FELs will come along sooner or later, but choosing them for the first-generation design would probably have delayed this project quite a considerable amount.
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they've pretty much been whipping on the US Air Force when it comes to both aircraft and lasers and missile defense systems.
This has been going on since the 1950s.
Navy: F-8 Crusader. Air Force: F-100, F-101, etc...
Navy: F-4 Phantom II Air Force: F-101, F-105 - Result: AF forced to buy Navy planes.
Navy: A-4 and A-7. Air Force: THUNDERCHIEF! followed by A-7 (another AF forced to buy Navy planes)
Navy: Standard Missile (Ground to air) Air Force: Bunch of crap. Nike, Bomarc, etc...
Navy: Sparrow AAM Air Force
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Umm, and where will those 100kW come from?
Certainly not from any batteries in that jet. Or else it will become so sluggish that it either has to carry huge engines, and become a bomber, or will be shot down by everything that now is quicker.
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Certainly not from any batteries in that jet
The engine. Takes a lot of energy to fly at Mach 1.5, you know. In fact, derivatives of jet engines are essentially how gas turbine power plants operate. On hot day, when the utility needs peak power, they turn on the jets, literally, and that's how most people get electricity above and beyond baseline coal and nuclear.
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I think obsolete is way to strong a term since the real problem at this point is targetting and tracking. Once you have those problems solved it's really immaterial what flavor laser is being used.
Once there's a suitable FEL system slot it into place.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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Along those lines I would argue that a solution is to ban nuclear weapons development (and redevelopment) point blank but permit nuclear countermeasure development. Knowing that they can't boost their capacity for offense any more, a countermeasure arms race will ensue amounst the nuke-holding powers until the entire world's nuclear arsenal is literally useless. It can then be decommissioned.
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And this would work because, as we all know, no-one would ever ignore solemn treaty obligations and develop nuclear w
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Or did you think the world suddenly became more civilized after WWII ended?
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Why do we worry about missiles when it is so easy to smuggle nuclear weapons into the US inside of drug shipments? The enemy wouldn't even need to be a suicide bomber. They could just rent an apartment, put the thing on a 3-week timer, and leave the country. This is not a problem that can be solved by better lasers.
-- 77IM
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Besides, the last time the US was the only nuclear power over 100,000 people died, mostly civilians.
25 years to show Star Wars might work (Score:2)
Very impressive (Score:2)
It's pretty tough to get a missile to arrive at the exact place and time that a weapon is firing at.
Where's the vid? (Score:2)
Great. (Score:2)
Re:Great. (Score:5, Informative)
An impressive amount of wrong in a one-line post.
1) This is a boost-phase defense, so it works when the missile is over the hostile country, not over the U.S.
2) Because of Russia's size, we probably won't be able to use this weapon against them unless they let us fly our airborne laser over their country, which is unlikely. This is for defending against launches by smaller countries.
3) It's pretty much impossible to cause a nuke to detonate by firing a weapon at it.
4) Debris from a shot-down nuke may be unhealthy if it lands on your house, but it's a whole lot better than vaporizing Manhattan.
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It was in boost phase. Figure about a 200+ mile range so this is really going to be limited to battlefield missiles.
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FYI, Cruise Missiles -- or the Tomahawk at least which is the one I'm familiar with -- are unmanned aircraft that fly at fairly high speed at very low altitude. I suspect your local police SWAT team could shoot one down if they knew where it was going to be at some time, and were waiting for it.
Not a good target for a laser I would think as the attacker will probably choose a route that makes maximum use of terrain features. The target won't be in sight very long -- by intent. And the laser's tracking wi
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And it wouldn't be the first time someone didn't read the FA. The laser successfully destroyed 2 missiles. Obviously then, it's able to track long enough to induce structural breakup.
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Thanks for repeating the summary for us.
Re:Don't be interested yet, headline is incorrect (Score:5, Informative)
Nothing was destroyed or shot down and the laser weapon was not fired.
This article says that you are wrong [mda.mil].
Finally, the ALTB fired its megawatt-class High Energy Laser, heating the boosting ballistic missile to critical structural failure...
Less than one hour later, a second solid fuel short-range missile was launched from a ground location on San Nicolas Island, Calif. and the ALTB successfully engaged the boosting target with its High Energy Laser, met all its test criteria, and terminated lasing prior to destroying the second target. The ALTB destroyed a solid fuel missile, identical to the second target, in flight on February 3, 2010.
Summary: the ALTB engaged and destroyed a liquid fueled target and then engaged, but did not destroy, a solid fueled target. The megawatt class laser was fired in both cases.
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The Missile Defense Agency article does sound much more impressive. I am surprised to find that the Reuters rehash of the press release was so sloppy. I'd really like to see an independent journalist's description of the events though.
That would be hard to find. There really isn't such a thing as an independent journalist where military testing is concerned. They're not just going to let any publication send a reporter.
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I am surprised to find that the Reuters rehash of the press release was so sloppy.
Why? My experience is that Reuters stories are generally very sloppy. They often seem to distort information to reflect a certain bias.
Re:Apparently Reuters Fails at Journalism (Score:5, Insightful)
I would hesitate to call Reuters a "left-wing" organization. They are driven by profits, if there is a larger profit to be made catering to the left, so be it, but they will report with bias to any side of the political spectrum if there is money in it. If it bleeds, it leads, it doesn't matter if it's a liberal or a conservative.
This case in specific, being a pro-military grade weapon R&D summary would IMO be considered slightly more to the right as most lefties I know are in favor of reducing military spending. If Reuters were a left-wing organization, I would have expected this article to point out how bloated, behind schedule and over budget the MDA is on almost all of its projects. I would expect them to drop the names of the congressmen/senators who sponsored the bill/amendment to get this project funded, and I would expect them to make some point about how the money could be better spent.
On the other hand, if Reuters was a "right-wing" organization, I would have expected this article to include a list of congressmen/senators who opposed the project, an iteration of countries that have missiles that this device could disable, and a number of warnings about terrorist, NBC warheads, and something to do with Sarah Pallin.
What we have though, is an article that appears to be keeping to a limited scope of facts. Although it gets a number of these facts wrong, I'm not seeing a whole lot of bias, just incompetence.
-Rick
Lasers vs. Railguns (Score:5, Funny)
My money is on railguns being the most practical weapon first:
http://gizmodo.com/351467/navy-rail-gun-test-destroys-everything-it-touches-at-5640-mph [gizmodo.com]
Besides, lasers are a bit girly, they're just like overpowered flashlights ;) There's something more manly about accurately launching a solid lump of metal 200 miles at just short of mach 8!
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Lasers may be girly but they are a whole lot sexier than railguns which is basically just a gun that shoots really fast bullets
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Railguns are great for single trajectory targets. It is useless against a cruise missile or a missile designed to adjust it's trajectory to try and avoid destruction.
I'f I was a missile guidance developer I'd add laser detection all around the missile and then add in code to do avoidance when detected.
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The /. article is definitely wrong, given that the missile was fired from an island, not a sub. However, the linked article contradicts itself - first it says "The Missile Defense Agency demonstrated the potential use of directed energy to defend against ballistic missiles when the Airborne Laser Testbed (ALTB) successfully destroyed a boosting ballistic missile" (emphasis mine) but later in the same article it says what you said.
So either it was destroyed or it wasn't, but it was fired from an island, not
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It had to be launched from an island or ship. The US has never launched a liquid fueled ballistic missile from a sub. Cruise missiles yes but ballistic no.
Re:Don't be interested yet, headline is incorrect (Score:4, Informative)
6th paragraph:
7th paragraph
The statement about the current test is the fifth paragraph. So TFA 'discusses' two tests. The current one where a liquid fueled booster was destroyed and the previous test where destruction of the booster was 'verified by instruments'. No wonder people don't read the TFA.
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Wow you are so wrong and yet you where modded up to a five.
http://www.engadget.com/2010/02/12/boeing-747-destroys-ballistic-missile-with-laser/?s=t5 [engadget.com]
Including pictures of the shootdown.
Just amazing....
Slashdot, Reuters, and above comment: all wrong. (Score:2)
Deeply deeply misinformed. The Missile Defense Agency [mda.mil] press release is better than the Reuters article and a thousand times better than the Slashdot headline blurb. Some corrections:
1. Two targets were destroyed - one liquid and one solid fueled. This puts the lie to the above comment, and the Slashdot article that implies that they only shot a liquid-fueled target because it was easier. Furthermore, the solid-fueled target was identical to one that the ALTB had destroyed in flight a week earlier.
2. The
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1. Two targets were destroyed - one liquid and one solid fueled. This puts the lie to the above comment, and the Slashdot article that implies that they only shot a liquid-fueled target because it was easier. Furthermore, the solid-fueled target was identical to one that the ALTB had destroyed in flight a week earlier.
The press release you link to states that they only shot down one target in this test - the liquid fueled one.
Less than one hour later, a second solid fuel short-range missile was launched from a ground location on San Nicolas Island, Calif. and the ALTB successfully engaged the boosting target with its High Energy Laser, met all its test criteria, and terminated lasing prior to destroying the second target. The ALTB destroyed a solid fuel missile, identical to the second target, in flight on February 3, 2010.
So it fired its high energy laser at the second target, but switched off the laser before actually destroying it. However they had previously destroyed an identical target.
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***I like it more than the "missile defense shield", but only marginally.***
Yeah, pretty much.
Except that a missile defense shield built with current technology is pretty much useless against any opponent with any sophistication at all.
But this could be the precursor to a system that will -- after 20 or 30 years of additional hard work -- stand a reasonable chance of looking at cloud of warheads, tank fragments, decoys and lord know what else, and taking out the warheads before they reach their target.
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I prefer space based and call it "hammer of god"
Come on let's start naming our new systems with cool names!
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Yup, another 20-30 more years of work and we'll have another system that can defend against 20-30 year old technologies. ;)
-Rick
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Just found this video, clearly shows the laser in action at the ALTB.
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An enemy planning a missile attack would likely deploy spetsnaz/special forces-type units to destroy such platforms in advance of their missile launch. Such forces would already be in-country weeks or months before their strike, perhaps organized as a sports team or as individuals on tourist or student visas.
Fuck it, why not just have THEM carry the bombs? Saves you from building the missiles in the first place.
Clearly, protecting these planes will be of extreme priority; they will probably be stored at a completely undisclosed location, that's if they are even allowed to land. It seems practical that these things would eventually be completely unmanned, requiring only an occasional fueling rendezvous to stay aloft for many months at a time.
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Re:Obvious vulnerability is....obvious? (Score:4, Interesting)
"An enemy planning a missile attack would likely deploy spetsnaz/special forces-type units to destroy such platforms in advance of their missile launch."
That's why strategic aircraft assets are stationed on appropriately guarded bases with sufficient folks to fend off intruders, just as they were in the good old days of Strategic Air Command (back before TAC ate the rest of the Air Force).
The enemy planning a missile attack that ABL is designed to mitigate isn't a major nation-state, but a smaller foe with fewer missiles. As nuclear proliferation among fanatic regimes ensures smallish nuclear war will happen, defensive preparations make sense. Likewise, ABL that can defeat rockets and other conventional systems will have use providing top cover against them.
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ICBMs go very high so you don't have to be terribly close to get a line of fire to them with a laser while they are still ascending, especially if the laser is mounted on a plane. You cannot intercept them once they reach space and the warheads separate, you've simply got way too many targets then. Laser interception usually works by igniting fuel or explosives on the target, post-separation nuclear warheads don't carry much directly explosive stuff, just enough to initiate the fission (and it will probably
Re:Boosting (Score:4, Informative)
No, this is designed to hit the targets while in boost phase. It's mounted on a plane so that the interception zone is where ever the plane is. Worried about North Korea? Just fly around the Sea of Japan. Worried about Iran? Fly around the Persian Gulf. Worried about China v Taiwan, fly it near the Formosa Straits.
Other systems are intended for ballistic and reentry phases.
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Putting said 1.21 Gigawatts power supply light enough to mount on an airplane however is anything but easy. In fact, since laser tracking that accurate has been possible since the 80s and since no ones ever made a laser that powerful while still being relatively light, I'd say that the hard part is going to be getting the weight down, not hitting the target.
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They fit it in a Delorean in the 80's fitting it in a 747 should be trivial.
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Depending on weather conditions couldn't an airplane agitate the atmosphere and attract lighting and dump lighting into a capacitor
Granted it isn't as on demand as this kind of system would need to be
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Actually the Russians used a liquid fueled missiles on subs... I think some of them still are but I have not checked in a while.
I have read that they are using one of the old LHD as a launching barge for missile tests.
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