• Smithsonian
    Institution
  • Smithsonian
    Journeys
  • Smithsonian
    Store
  • Smithsonian
    Channel
  • goSmithsonian
    Visitors Guide
  • Smithsonian
    magazine

AirSpaceMag.com

  • Subscribe
  • Home
  • History of Flight
  • Flight Today
  • Military Aviation
  • Space Exploration
  • Need to Know
  • How Things Work
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Military Aviation

How Things Work: Missile Killer

In this tables-turned scenario, the airplane shoots down the missile.

  • By Damond Benningfield
  • Air & Space magazine, May 2010
View More Photos »
An engineer adjusts the beam-control optics that ride in the nose of the Airborne Laser Testbed a modified Boeing 747-400F. The optics stabilize and shape the weapon laser’s beam as it is aimed by the nose turret’s computer-controlled telescope at a targ An engineer adjusts the beam-control optics that ride in the nose of the Airborne Laser Testbed, a modified Boeing 747-400F. The optics stabilize and shape the weapon laser’s beam as it is aimed by the nose turret’s computer-controlled telescope at a targ

Lockheed Martin

 
Tweet

Article Tools

 
  • Font
  • Email
  • Print
  • Comments (2)
  • RSS
  • Related Topics

    Electronic warfare

    Photo Gallery

    An engineer adjusts the beamcontrol optics that ride in the nose of the Airborne Laser Testbed, amodified Boeing 747-400F. The optics stabilize and shape the weapon laser’s beamas it is aimed by the nose turret’s computer-controlled telescope at a targetm

    How Things Work: Missile Killer

    Explore more photos from the story


    Video Gallery

    The Flying Laser

    The Air Force's Airborne Laser Testbed, up close.


    Last February, off the California coast, military aerospace achieved a first: an airplane fired a laser, destroying a missile shortly after it had been launched. Here’s how.

    The laser is one of several being developed by Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman. While some lasers are being designed to attack battlefield targets at close range, this high-energy, megawatt, chemical laser on board a modified Boeing 747-400F is specifically designed to destroy all classes of ballistic missiles during the first few minutes after launch.

    Though the technology appears to work, its huge cost will clip the Airborne Laser’s wings. Last spring, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates cancelled a second test aircraft and eliminated plans to deploy operational Airborne Lasers. He is allowing the test program to continue with the remaining 747, now called the Airborne Laser Testbed, because it is contributing to a broader understanding of directed-energy weapons.

    In combat, the airplane would orbit at about 40,000 feet near the front lines of a battle or as close to enemy missile sites as possible. Six infrared sensors on the airplane’s fuselage would detect a missile as it climbed above 40,000 feet at a range of up to “a few hundred kilometers,” says Mike Rinn, Airborne Laser program director for lead contractor Boeing (a kilometer is .62 mile). Like many details about the weapon, the exact range is classified.

    Atop the fuselage, the Active Ranging System, a modified electronic targeting pod like those used by fighter airplanes, would acquire the missile and track it with a high-power gas laser to determine its launch and impact points. An onboard computer system would identify and classify the missile as an enemy target. Then, inside a bulbous turret in the 747’s nose, a telescope with a 50-inch-diameter mirror would turn toward the missile.

    Next, a Tracking Illuminator Laser would fire four narrow beams at the target, and the telescope would detect their reflection, refining the distance and direction to the missile.

    A Beacon Illuminator Laser would then fire four more beams to measure distortions created as these beams passed through air masses of different temperatures and densities, which bend light in different directions. Once the distortions were measured, the system would compensate for them by reshaping small mirrors hundreds of times per second. This would be accomplished by hundreds of tiny electric actuators, or pistons, similar to the adaptive optics used in ground-based astronomical telescopes. Reshaping the mirrors allows them to reflect the final, high-power, weapon laser in a way that focuses its energy to counteract the atmospheric effects, and aims the narrowest possible beam at the target.

    The weapon is a Chemical Oxygen Iodine Laser, which uses a combination of hydrogen peroxide, potassium, sodium, and lithium hydroxide (“Think Drano,” Rinn says). In the back of the 747, the chilled laser fuel would be sprayed through a grid of pores like a showerhead, and passed through a mixture of chlorine and helium to produce a form of oxygen. The oxygen is then injected with iodine gas, which excites it and produces photons that are intensified to create the infrared laser beam, which exits the nose turret. The challenge is to create enough energy for the beam to maintain strength and duration over the distance to a target missile. In a few seconds, the beam heats the missile enough to rupture its fuel tanks and destroy it.

    “The system is extremely capable,” says Rinn. “As we tune it and increase the power and decrease the jitter and make the [atmospheric] control even better, the range will go up.” He adds that studies by Boeing show that the weapon could also shoot down aircraft, surface-to-air missiles, drones, and other targets.

    With more successes, might the Pentagon reconsider and fund an operational system? Practical limitations would almost surely prevent it, according to Barry Watts, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. “If you want to maintain a 24-hour orbit, how many airplanes would you need?” he asks. “The answer is probably three or four.” And that’s just for one area of interest—the Airborne Laser was never intended for global use. “You’d probably get pretty good coverage off the east coast of North Korea, for example,” he says. “Then there’s the issue of having the intelligence beforehand to position the orbit in the right place so you can actually do something against boost-phase missiles. Gates’ position was that we’re not going to buy a large enough fleet of these things to be able to fulfill realistic operational requirements.”

    Watts could see a high-energy chemical laser on the ground. “Israel has a small area to defend,” he says. “They could hook [a big chemical] laser up to a ground-based industrial system. That makes a lot of sense for their problems. For the U.S., with so much more territory to defend, that would get expensive fast.” One day, the laser may be able to reach targets far higher than boost-phase missiles. “You could put a big one on the ground and mess with people’s satellites,” says Watts. Airborne or not, it looks like lasers have arrived.

    Damond Benningfield is a science and technology writer in Austin, Texas.

    Last February, off the California coast, military aerospace achieved a first: an airplane fired a laser, destroying a missile shortly after it had been launched. Here’s how.

    The laser is one of several being developed by Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman. While some lasers are being designed to attack battlefield targets at close range, this high-energy, megawatt, chemical laser on board a modified Boeing 747-400F is specifically designed to destroy all classes of ballistic missiles during the first few minutes after launch.

    Though the technology appears to work, its huge cost will clip the Airborne Laser’s wings. Last spring, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates cancelled a second test aircraft and eliminated plans to deploy operational Airborne Lasers. He is allowing the test program to continue with the remaining 747, now called the Airborne Laser Testbed, because it is contributing to a broader understanding of directed-energy weapons.

    In combat, the airplane would orbit at about 40,000 feet near the front lines of a battle or as close to enemy missile sites as possible. Six infrared sensors on the airplane’s fuselage would detect a missile as it climbed above 40,000 feet at a range of up to “a few hundred kilometers,” says Mike Rinn, Airborne Laser program director for lead contractor Boeing (a kilometer is .62 mile). Like many details about the weapon, the exact range is classified.

    Atop the fuselage, the Active Ranging System, a modified electronic targeting pod like those used by fighter airplanes, would acquire the missile and track it with a high-power gas laser to determine its launch and impact points. An onboard computer system would identify and classify the missile as an enemy target. Then, inside a bulbous turret in the 747’s nose, a telescope with a 50-inch-diameter mirror would turn toward the missile.

    Next, a Tracking Illuminator Laser would fire four narrow beams at the target, and the telescope would detect their reflection, refining the distance and direction to the missile.

    A Beacon Illuminator Laser would then fire four more beams to measure distortions created as these beams passed through air masses of different temperatures and densities, which bend light in different directions. Once the distortions were measured, the system would compensate for them by reshaping small mirrors hundreds of times per second. This would be accomplished by hundreds of tiny electric actuators, or pistons, similar to the adaptive optics used in ground-based astronomical telescopes. Reshaping the mirrors allows them to reflect the final, high-power, weapon laser in a way that focuses its energy to counteract the atmospheric effects, and aims the narrowest possible beam at the target.

    The weapon is a Chemical Oxygen Iodine Laser, which uses a combination of hydrogen peroxide, potassium, sodium, and lithium hydroxide (“Think Drano,” Rinn says). In the back of the 747, the chilled laser fuel would be sprayed through a grid of pores like a showerhead, and passed through a mixture of chlorine and helium to produce a form of oxygen. The oxygen is then injected with iodine gas, which excites it and produces photons that are intensified to create the infrared laser beam, which exits the nose turret. The challenge is to create enough energy for the beam to maintain strength and duration over the distance to a target missile. In a few seconds, the beam heats the missile enough to rupture its fuel tanks and destroy it.

    “The system is extremely capable,” says Rinn. “As we tune it and increase the power and decrease the jitter and make the [atmospheric] control even better, the range will go up.” He adds that studies by Boeing show that the weapon could also shoot down aircraft, surface-to-air missiles, drones, and other targets.

    With more successes, might the Pentagon reconsider and fund an operational system? Practical limitations would almost surely prevent it, according to Barry Watts, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. “If you want to maintain a 24-hour orbit, how many airplanes would you need?” he asks. “The answer is probably three or four.” And that’s just for one area of interest—the Airborne Laser was never intended for global use. “You’d probably get pretty good coverage off the east coast of North Korea, for example,” he says. “Then there’s the issue of having the intelligence beforehand to position the orbit in the right place so you can actually do something against boost-phase missiles. Gates’ position was that we’re not going to buy a large enough fleet of these things to be able to fulfill realistic operational requirements.”

    Watts could see a high-energy chemical laser on the ground. “Israel has a small area to defend,” he says. “They could hook [a big chemical] laser up to a ground-based industrial system. That makes a lot of sense for their problems. For the U.S., with so much more territory to defend, that would get expensive fast.” One day, the laser may be able to reach targets far higher than boost-phase missiles. “You could put a big one on the ground and mess with people’s satellites,” says Watts. Airborne or not, it looks like lasers have arrived.

    Damond Benningfield is a science and technology writer in Austin, Texas.



    Related topics: Electronic warfare


    Tweet Digg
     
    Comments (2)

    Wouldn't a simple way to counter the laser simply be to cover the skin of the missile in a reflective material ?
    Silver foil is cheap compared to airborn lasers !

    Posted by David Alan Tilley on March 26,2010 | 12:40 PM

    No, coating the missile in reflective material wouldn't (be guaranteed to) work.
    You see, the lasers used can have a range of frequencies, the coating would have to essentially reflect anything and everything thrown at them from X-rays to infra red light (and beyond those to both ends of the spectrum).
    While some frequency bands are easier to use and create than are others (some are hard to lase, others may have trouble penetrating air) that's still a major hurdle to overcome. The cost and weight penalties would be tremendous (if a coating could be found at all).

    Tin foil might work if the lasers used visible light, but they don't. The picture shown is just an artist's impression, in reality no visible beam of light is ever created by a laser, even one in the visible spectrum which the lasers on board the ABL (or whatever it's called now) are definitely not.

    Posted by JTW on April 26,2010 | 02:28 AM

    Post a Comment


    Name: (required)

    Email: (required)

    Comment:

    Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.



    Advertisement


    Most Popular

    • Viewed
    • Emailed
    • Commented
    • Topics
    1. The World From Your Airplane Window
    2. Inside the Enola Gay
    3. D’oh! 10 Goofs in Space
    4. The Legacy of Flight
    5. Where Have All the Phantoms Gone?
    6. 100 Years of Marine Aviation
    7. Grab the Airplane and Go
    8. B-36: Bomber at the Crossroads
    9. The Jet as Art
    10. At the B-17 Co-op
    1. 100 Years of Marine Aviation
    2. Grab the Airplane and Go
    3. The Other Harlem
    4. At the B-17 Co-op
    5. A Sudden Loss of Altitude
    6. Ride-Sharing With the Rich
    7. The Rise and Fall and Rise of Iridium
    8. *Pilot Not Included
    9. Extraterrestrial Outfitter
    10. Ground Proximity Warnings
    1. At the B-17 Co-op
    2. Commentary: Metric Mayhem
    3. Why do airline seats have to be in an upright position during takeoff?
    4. Where Have All the Phantoms Gone?
    5. Top NASA Photos of All Time
    6. The Other Air Forces
    7. If I Were to Land on Mars...
    8. Mr. Fix-It
    9. Above & Beyond: The Village of Tempelhof
    10. The World's Highest Laboratory
    1. Bombers
    2. Experimental Aircraft
    3. Cold War Era
    4. Vietnam War
    5. 21st Century Aviation
    6. Golden Age of Flight
    7. Military Aviators
    8. Aviators
    9. Aerospace
    10. Airplane Restoration
    11. Fighters

    View All Most Popular »

    Advertisement


    Follow Us

    Air & Space Magazine
    @airspacemag
    Follow Air & Space Magazine on Twitter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian.com, including daily newsletters and special offers.

    Popular Videos

    • Newest
    • Most Viewed

    The East Coast at Night

    (1:20)

    The Milky Way From Orbit

    (0:22)

    Cameras Instead of Guns

    (2:00)

    Resisting Enemy Interrogation

    (1:05:34)

    View All Newest Videos »

    Go For Launch!

    (3:52)

    Directing Hermann Goering

    (3:16)

    Refueling Over Iraq

    Refueling Over Iraq

    (02:20)

    Cameras Instead of Guns

    (2:00)

    View All Videos »

    In the Magazine

    FM2012 Cover

    March 2012

    • The World's Highest Laboratory
    • 100 Years of Marine Aviation
    • At the B-17 Co-op
    • Extraterrestrial Outfitter
    • World War II: The Movie

    View Table of Contents »

    Snapshot

    Old Recruit

    A rare Ryan PT-22 goes up for auction.

    Reader Scrapbook

    Over the Pacific

    Check out our scrapbook of readers' aviation and space pictures. Then add your own.


    Smithsonian Store

    24K Space Shuttle Orbiter Model

    Item No. 68048

    Smithsonian Journeys

    Astronomy in Arizona

    Enjoy exclusive observatory visits and skywatching in the southwest (May 9 - 13, 2012)




    View full archiveRecent Issues

    • FM2012 Cover
      Mar 2012


    • Jan 2012


    • Nov 2011

    Newsletter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Air & Space magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

    Subscribe Now

    About Us

    Air & Space/Smithsonian magazine has been delighting aerospace enthusiasts with the best writing about their favorite subject since April 1986. As an adjunct of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, Air & Space matches the grand scope of the Museum, encompassing every era of aviation and space exploration. With stories that range from the Wright Brothers to the design of NASA's next lunar lander, Air & Space emphasizes the human stories as well as the technology of aviation and spaceflight.

    Explore our Brands

    • goSmithsonian.com
    • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
    • Smithsonian Student Travel
    • Smithsonian Catalogue
    • Smithsonian Journeys
    • Smithsonian Channel
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright
    • About Air & Space
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Subscribe
    • RSS
    • Topics

    Smithsonian Institution

    Produced by Clickability