No longer the fantasy weapon of tomorrow, the U.S. Navy is set to field a
powerful laser that can protect its ships by blasting targets with
high-intensity light beams.
Early next year the Navy will place a laser weapon aboard a ship in the
Persian Gulf where it could be used to fend off approaching unmanned
aerial vehicles or speedboats.
The Navy calls its futuristic weapon LAWS, which stands for the Laser Weapon System. What looks like a small telescope is actually a weapon that can track a moving target and fire a steady laser beam strong enough to burn a hole through steel.
A Navy video of testing conducted last summer off the coast of California shows how a laser beam fired from a Navy destroyer was able to set aflame an approaching UAV or drone, sending it crashing into the ocean.
"There was not a single miss" during the testing, said Rear Admiral
Matthew Klunder, chief of Naval Research. The laser was three for three
in bringing down an approaching unmanned aerial vehicle and 12 for 12
when previous tests are factored in.
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