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What's Inside Darpa's $21 Million 'Liquid' Laser?Now, Darpa is weighing in with an yet another technology: HELLADS or
"High Energy Liquid Laser Area Defense System." Weaponeer Textron will
get $21 million in Darpa bucks "to design, fabricate and test a Unit
Cell Module for a 150 kilowatt (kW) Laser Weapon System," according to
a company press release.As you'd expect from Darpa, the new
laser is aiming for quantum leap, with a power-to-weight ratio ten
times better than existing laser systems. The end product will be the
size of a large refrigerator and weight of 1650 pounds. And a hundred
and fifty kilowatts is real weapons-grade, compared to existing solid
state lasers which still zap in the tens of kilowatts.The
agency's website says that "HELLADS will enable high-energy lasers
(HELs) to be integrated onto tactical aircraft and will significantly
increase engagement ranges compared to ground-based systems." The 150
kW laser is meant to be integrated with an existing fire-control system
and will demonstrate the ability to shoot down tactical targets
including surface-to-air missiles and rockets. That would be quite
something: a fighter jet which can shoot down any missiles fired at it.
Suddenly stealth doesn't seem quite so important, when the air defenses
can see you but can't touch you. Cannon fire from other aircraft might
still be a threat, but what are the chances of anyone getting close
enough before you laser them?Despite Washington chatter of
programmatic stumbles, HELLADS seems to be growing rapidly, from with a
1 kilowatt version in 2004 to a 15 kW version in 2006. Now, they are
confident enough to start on the full-size model. However, the $21
million deal will not cover building the whole thing, just one module,
plus the design for the entire system; the finished product will cost
something extra. Still, it's small change compared to the $7+ billion
spent on the Airborne laser.Lasers all work in pretty much the
same way: Excite certain kinds of atoms, and light particles — photons
— radiate out. Reflect that light back into the excited atoms, and more
photons appear. But performance varies wildly, depending on the kind of
"gain medium" — the type of atoms — you use to generate the beam. The
Airborne Lasers uses vats of chemicals. Raytheon's Phalanx uses
solid-state materials. But those kind of lasers can rapidly overheat
and suffer damage (a laser with a 50% efficiency generates the same
amount of waste heat as the energy in the beam). Liquid lasers (like
HELLADS, presumably) are less vulnerable to this, since the liquid can
be cooled by circulation.But is HELLADS still a liquid laser,
really? However, Textron say that their HELLADS design is based on
"proprietary ThinZag Ceramic solid-state laser technology"; earlier
Textron HELLADS work also refers to ThinZag solid state technology and
does not mention the liquid aspect. ThinZag itself appears to be an
advanced type of slab laser -- an entirely different way of solving the
problem of waste heat.DARPA were cagey about how it works, offering only this statement:
"We are not able to provide details of the HELLADS laser technology
other than to say that HELLADS performance is enabled by a novel laser
design that combines the high energy density of a solid state laser
with the efficient thermal management of a liquid laser. "A
perusal of some technical literature suggests that HELLADS is composed
of a series of thin ceramic slabs, bathed in rapidly circulating
coolant. The clever feature is that the laser beam actually passes
through the coolant, which makes engineering much more straightforward.Phil
Coyle, a senior advisor at the Center for Defense Information, is not
convinced it will work. He suggests that previous anti-missile laser
tests have not been carried out under realistic operational
conditions." The challenge is to achieve militarily effective damage
against an unpredictable and fast-moving target. Damaging an enemy
surface-to-air missile with a laser is like trying to set flying wet
logs on fire with a match," he says.Then again, perhaps
designers are not counting on HELLADS damaging the missile itself.
Anti-aircraft missiles (especially heat-seeking ones) have delicate
sensors which are vulnerable to laser damage, and there are already
laser countermeasures systems which are capable of putting a beam on to
an incoming missile. So HELLADS may still be successful as a defensive
system, even if the amount of energy it puts on target is less than
awesome in the offensive role. And if it comes to it, HELLADS is
certainly powerful enough to take out the other pilot's eyeballs in a
dogfight.
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