Friday, March 7, 2014

Navy will deploy first ship with laser weapon this summer

Navy’s LaWS will save bullets and missiles—and blind and burn drones and boats.

The USS Ponce, currently in a shipyard for overhaul, will gain the Navy's first laser weapon to protect it from "asymmetric threats"—drones, small boats, and improvised air attacks.
US Navy
After successful testing last year, the Navy is preparing to deploy its first directed energy weapon to the fleet. When it puts to sea this summer, the afloat forward staging base ship USS Ponce will be equipped with the Navy’s Laser Weapon System (LaWS).
LaWS is a system based on a design developed by the Navy Research Lab and engineers at the Naval Sea Systems Command and Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren. Its purpose is not to vaporize enemy ships but to provide a low-cost way for the Navy to defend against drones, small boats, light aircraft, and missiles at ranges of about a mile.
A prototype of the Laser Weapon System (LaWS) at sea in a test in 2013.
While the Navy will still depend on missiles and guns to defend against bigger targets, the LaWS system is designed to cost about a dollar a shot without the fuss and muss of the depleted uranium bullets spewed by the Navy’s Phalanx Close-In Weapons System (CIWS). It can be used for a “hard” kill on smaller targets (directing enough energy at the target to set it on fire or explode fuel aboard it) or for a “soft” kill by blinding a drone or missile’s imaging sensors.
“The effects are scalable,” Navy Captain Mike Ziv, the Naval Sea Systems Command’s program manager for directed energy and electric weapons, told the Department of Defense’s Armed With Science blog. “In some cases [the effects are] reversible, and in some cases it can be used for destruction.”
In a test last May, an initial prototype of the system used the CIWS’ radar system to target, blind, and then destroy a drone in flight from the deck of a ship. The video below is a bit misleading—it didn't shoot down one of the multi-million dollar carrier-based drones the Navy is testing.


Laser Weapon System

The Navy’s video showing the test of the Laser Weapon System. You may want to mute the audio.
“One of the advantages of the laser system we’re using,” Ziv told Armed with Science, “is that it’s based on commercial technologies. It’s fairly efficient compared to other lasers, and because of that, it can be powered on a lot of different platforms, using existing power sources.”
The deployment of LaWS aboard the Ponce is the final step before it moves from prototype to an actual “program of record” weapon system. ‘What we really want to prove, beyond a shadow of a doubt,” Ziv said, “is that this system is ready to be operated in theater… by our sailors and is ready to transition to be in broader use throughout the fleets. And I think we’re on track to get that done.”
The LaWS is just the first step down the high-energy weapon path for the Navy. Higher-powered directed weapons systems and rail guns are both under development, and the new Zumwalt-class destroyers being built by the Navy have more than sufficient electrical generation capacity to power much larger directed energy weapons than the LaWS.

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