Milestones for US Airborne Laser mapped out (with pics)

Jeff Head

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The threat of cancellation no longer looms over the Pentagon's Airborne Laser (ABL) effort, but senior program officials say they are taking nothing for granted as they prepare for a missile-intercept demonstration in 2008.

Several clear test milestones have been laid out for the ABL in 2006 so that senior Missile Defense Agency (MDA) officials will be able to measure its progress, according to Air Force Col. John Daniels, the ABL's program director.

The ABL is a Boeing 747 aircraft being equipped with a high-powered chemical laser to destroy ballistic missiles in their boost phase. Boeing Co. of Chicago is the prime contactor on the effort.

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h_abl_inflight_02.jpg

Successful exposure of the laser conformal window during flight in May.

h_abl_cutaway_02.jpg

Layout of of various systems within the Airborne Laser aircraft.

h_turretball_window_02.jpg

The Turret Ball Conformal Window on the Flight Turret Assembly for the Airborne Laser.
 

MIGleader

Banned Idiot
If I remeber clearly, that laser ball was developed by Northrop Grumman. It was classifed as the most powerful laser in the world in the Scholastic Book of world records 2005. pretty impressive. does it protect against SAM's?
 

The_Zergling

Junior Member
Pardon my ignorance, but how the hell does that thing even work anyway?

Obviously the laser will be focused on the target for a certain amount of time in order to destroy it or render it inoperable, but how to go about this?
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
The_Zergling said:
Obviously the laser will be focused on the target for a certain amount of time in order to destroy it or render it inoperable, but how to go about this?
There are actually three lasers. Two solid state illuminator lasers (less powerful). One illuminates the target and the other checks atmoospheric conditions. Then based on that info, the more powerful Chemical Laser hits the target, which is meant to be a boosting balllistic missile...particularly ICBMs.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
MIGleader said:
If I remeber clearly, that laser ball was developed by Northrop Grumman. It was classifed as the most powerful laser in the world in the Scholastic Book of world records 2005. pretty impressive. does it protect against SAM's?
It is meant to protect against ICBMs in their boost stage. Clearly as such, it could probably be used against any ballistic missile.
 

tphuang

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Jeff Head said:
There are actually three lasers. Two solid state illuminator lasers (less powerful). One illuminates the target and the other checks atmoospheric conditions. Then based on that info, the more powerful Chemical Laser hits the target, which is meant to be a boosting balllistic missile...particularly ICBMs.
This almost sounds like one of those things you watch in a sci-fi movie or James Bond movie in the case of die another day. It's really scary how much the technology has advanced that the BMD can be done this way.
 

WEN?

New Member
wow, they acutally made a laser to destroy missles. man that project costs so much. $471.6 million for it. i dun think they will be making to many of them for a while. does anyone know what they are going to use to power the laser??
 

Jeff Head

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tphuang said:
This almost sounds like one of those things you watch in a sci-fi movie or James Bond movie in the case of die another day. It's really scary how much the technology has advanced that the BMD can be done this way.
Pretty impressive advancement...but lets wait until they actually test the chemical laser and actually shoot down a ballistic missile before we know whether or not BMD can actually be done this way.

My guess is that it will and the US will build three or four of these things and develop the force defense strategies to deploy and protect them...a couple in the Pacific and a couple for the other side of the world. We shall see.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
WEN? said:
wow, they acutally made a laser to destroy missles. man that project costs so much. $471.6 million for it. i dun think they will be making to many of them for a while. does anyone know what they are going to use to power the laser??
The details of course are very classified, but it is called a high-power chemcal laser.

Here is an explanation I found...

A chemical laser is characteristically energized by an exoergic chemical reaction which produces the necessary population inversion of lasing species. Based on the enormous chemical energy deposit, several kinds of chemical laser now deliver the cw power outputs of megawatt magnitude, far higher than any other lasers. Accordingly, along with the improvement of gas medium homogeneity and mode-selectivity of the optical cavity a chemical laser has also attained high beam quality of a near diffraction-limited divergence angle.
 
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