An
Apache helicopter has successfully acquired and hit an unmanned target with a
laser gun for the first time in history.
Mounted
on an Apache AH-64 attack helicopter, the high energy laser tracked and
directed energy on the stationary target which was a little less than a mile
away.
The
achievement proves that laser weapons are no longer the work of science
fiction.
Weapon
manufacturer Raytheon said that never before has a fully integrated laser
system been able to successfully shoot a target from a rotary-wing aircraft
over an array of flight regimes, air speeds, and altitudes.
The
feat was made possible by combining a variant of the Multi-Spectral Targeting
System (MTS) — an advanced, electro-optical, infra-red sensor — with the laser
used in the attack.
According
to a defense specialist, the MTS was responsible for providing targeting
information, situational awareness, and beam control.
Vice
president of advanced concepts and technologies for Raytheon Space and Airborne
Systems Art Morrish said collecting data such as the impact of vibration, dust,
and rotor downwash would help shape future high-energy laser systems.
“Our
goal is to pull the future forward,” Morrish said. “This data collection shows
we’re on the right track.”
According
to the Pentagon, laser weapons bring sharp advantages to the battlefield as
they are silent and invisible to the human eye.
Not
only does this make them more difficult for enemies to detect, but lasers are
more accurate in hitting targets because they have a near-perfectly straight
trajectory.
As
lasers don’t have the arc flight path of artillery rounds, they are “more
effective at addressing rocket, artillery, mortar, or RAM threats, as well as
unmanned aircraft systems and cruise missiles.”
Used
by the US military since 1986, the Apache helicopters have previously relied on
weapons such as a 30-millimeter gun, 70-millimeter rockets, and heavy-duty
AGM-114 Hellfire missiles.
As
lasers don’t run out of bullets, this discovery could be a cost effective
solution for the military seeing as each AGM-114 Hellfire missile costs
$110,000.
The
test was conducted by Raytheon and the US Army Apache Program Management Office
in collaboration with US Special Operations Command at White Sands Missile
Range, New Mexico.
Source: http://nypost.com
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