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The U.S. Navy destroys a boat with new high-energy laser

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navy-high-energy-laserThe Navy has begun field testing early versions of its high-energy laser (HEL). In a press release, the U.S. military branch said that it successfully disabled a “small target vessel” on April 6, 2011. While the laser is still operating at a fraction of its final power, you can see it set fire to a boat engine in the video below.

Navy officials are calling the test a significant milestone toward a future where all Naval ships come equipped with ray guns. “This is the first time a HEL, at these power levels, has been put on a Navy ship, powered from that ship and used to defeat a target at-range in a maritime environment,” said Peter Morrison, ONR MLD program officer. “We are learning a ton from this program—how to integrate and work with directed energy weapons. All test results are extremely valuable regardless of the outcome.”

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The current laser only uses 15 kilowatts of power, while the final versions will be 100+ kilowatt in power, meaning that though this current laser takes about as much time as it takes a kid with a magnifying glass to fry a bug, future versions will be much deadlier. Still, it is impressive that the 15 kilowatt system was able to target a vessel on the moving ocean in highly humid conditions.

However, with each new superweapon comes an equally strange and cool counter-attack. While lasers will soon guard our ships against almost everything, hypersonic railguns fire so fast that it’s unlikely that a targeting computer will be able to track and destroy them in a pinch. Luckily, the Navy is working on its own railguns too.

Jeffrey Van Camp
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