Military & Aerospace Electronics

| Add RSS Feed

Neutralizing improvised explosive devices with lasers

ST. LOUIS—Officials at Boeing Integrated Defense Systems in St. Louis demonstrated that the company’s Avenger-mounted laser system can neutralize improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and unexploded ordnance (UXO) currently threatening U.S. troops in war zones.

During laser firings at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Ala., the Laser Avenger engaged and destroyed five targets representing IED and UXO threats. Laser Avenger, equipped with a 1-kilowatt solid-state laser, also destroyed two small unmanned aerial vehicles that were stationary on the ground.

“Boeing’s investment strategy is to move some of its new directed energy weapon systems into field demonstrations, and Laser Avenger is the first one we’re rolling out,” says Gary Fitzmire, vice president and program director of Boeing Directed Energy Systems. “Laser Avenger provides the speed-of-light and ultra-precision capability that the warfighter needs today to safely neutralize improvised explosive devices and unexploded ordnance.”

The Boeing-funded Laser Avenger was developed in eight months, company officials say.


Click here to enlarge image


Boeing’s Avenger air defense system is being upgraded with a laser system to neutralize improvised explosive devices and unexploded ordnance.

Laser Avenger is a Boeing-funded initiative to show that directed energy weapons are relevant to today’s battlefield and are ready to be fielded. Boeing developed the system in only eight months, company officials say.

Laser Avenger also is the latest in a series of Boeing upgrades to expand the Avenger air defense system into an Agile Multi-Role Weapon System (AMWS) with ground-to-ground as well as ground-to-air capability. The laser was added while retaining Avenger’s ability to carry other weapons, including missiles and a machine gun. By building on the Avenger, of which there are more than 600 fielded worldwide, Laser Avenger will take advantage of an existing global logistics network, Boeing officials say.

The laser segment of Laser Avenger will have uses beyond the counter-IED, counter-UXO mission. For instance, it could be upgraded to have a shoot-on-the-move capability and to destroy other kinds of targets, including low-flying unmanned aerial vehicles.

Military & Aerospace Electronics January, 2008



| Add RSS Feed


 
Return to Previous Page

 
 





 

Military & Aerospace Electronics Webcasts






Thermal Management: Keeping It Cool in Military Systems
Original broadcast on
November 16, 2009










The VPX STANDARD and Its Use in Military Applications
Original broadcast on
July 29, 2009












Implementing High Performance Embedded Applications with RapidIO Switching and High Performance Multicore DSPs
Original broadcast on
April 29, 2009





More
 
Sponsored White Papers Library
Recently Added White Papers

Controlling Source Code Complexity - The Business Case for Static Source Code Analysis (11/19/2009, Coverity, Inc.)

The Seven Deadly Myths of Software Security (11/19/2009, Coverity, Inc.)

The Next Generation of Static Analysis - Boolean Satisfiability, and Path Simulation....A Perfect Match for More Efficient Software Development (11/12/2009, Coverity, Inc.)

Ensuring Quality in Multi-threaded Applications (11/12/2009, Coverity, Inc.)

Compliance and Regulation: Meeting DO-178B Software Verification Guidelines with Coverity Integrity Center (11/10/2009, Coverity, Inc.)

More