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Base to test laser-shooting planes: Modified aircraft to track, destroy missiles
LA Daily News ^ | Jun 4, 2006 | JIM SKEEN, Staff Writer

Posted on 06/19/2006 9:20:57 PM PDT by demlosers

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE - "The Right Stuff" is going "Star Wars" as Edwards Air Force Base personnel prepare to test aircraft armed with laser weapons.

Documents made public by the Air Force show base officials are preparing an environmental assessment in preparation for conducting flight and ground tests of aircraft equipped with lasers: up to 140 flight tests and 24 ground tests this year, growing to 394 flight tests with 24 ground tests in 2010.

"Edwards Air Force Base is a cost-effective location for testing different laser technologies because of its facilities, its remote location, and its previous success and use as one of the nation's premier test and evaluation flight test centers," a draft of the environmental assessment stated.

"Thus, to continue providing the Air Force with a highly capable aircraft and aircraft weapons system test and evaluation capability, it is essential that the Air Force Flight Test Center conduct test and evaluation of laser systems."

Testing would be confined to restricted military airspace. Target areas for air-to-ground testing would be limited to five acres in size and there would be no more than 100 acres total designated for such use, the draft environmental assessment said.

Edwards is already hosting one laser program, the Airborne Laser, an aircraft weapon being developed to shoot down ballistic missiles. A unit of about 750 people are working on the program, which uses a significantly modified Boeing 747 fitted with a laser.

Airborne Laser program officials envision future Airborne Laser aircraft patrolling in pairs at more than 40,000 feet and inside friendly territory, scanning the horizon for missiles.

When a missile is detected, a set of lasers will track and illuminate it, and computers will measure the distance and calculate its course and direction.

A second high-energy laser, fired through the nose turret mounted on the aircraft, will destroy the missile. The laser is made up of six modules, each weighing 4,500 pounds and about the size of a sport utility vehicle turned on its end.

The beam will heat an area about the diameter of a basketball on the missile's relatively fragile fuel-tank casing. The laser will weaken metal already under high pressure from the ignited rocket fuel.

Ground tests of the laser were conducted at Edwards over an 11-month period, ending last December with a laser shot long enough and powerful enough that officials said it would have been capable of destroying a ballistic missile.

The Airborne Laser aircraft is now in Kansas being fitted with two illuminator lasers.

The airplane is expected to return to Edwards late this summer or early fall for flight tests to check out the illuminating lasers. The high-energy laser will be installed on the airplane in 2007.

A key milestone for the program will be a test to shoot down a missile in 2008.

Another weapon system reported in the Air Force document is the Advanced Tactical Laser, intended to destroy or disable a target on the ground without hurting buildings or people around it.

Sponsored by the Air Force Special Operations Command, the program is looking to develop a weapon that could fire a narrow beam, about four inches in diameter, with blow-torch-like heat in a "man-made bolt of lightning."

james.skeen@dailynews


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: airbornelaser; edwardsafb; laser; miltech; usaf
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To: JRios1968

Oh, thought we were talking l33t. PWNED?


41 posted on 06/20/2006 5:41:34 PM PDT by phantomworker ("I wouldn't hurt you for the world, but you are standing where I am about to shoot..."--Quaker quote)
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To: JRios1968
I know how much you love soccer.


42 posted on 06/20/2006 5:45:18 PM PDT by phantomworker ("I wouldn't hurt you for the world, but you are standing where I am about to shoot..."--Quaker quote)
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To: Prophet in the wilderness

I think lightening is probably rare enough that it would not be feasible.

I do recall reading about Tesla's experiments with this and how he created energy with his coil. So it may be possible to use lightening as the initial catalyst for a perpetual energy device.


43 posted on 06/20/2006 5:49:21 PM PDT by phoenix0468 (http://www.mylocalforum.com -- Go Speak Your Mind.)
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To: phantomworker

Yeah...almost as much as I love gall bladder surgery!


44 posted on 06/20/2006 6:31:41 PM PDT by JRios1968 (There's 3 kinds of people in this world...those who know math and those who don't.)
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