Texarkana Gazette

U.S. invests $17 million in laser tech

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ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — The U.S. Defense Department is making another multimilli­on-dollar investment in high-energy lasers that have the potential to destroy enemy drones and mortars, disrupt communicat­ion systems and provide military forces with other portable, less costly options on the battlefiel­d.

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee and longtime supporter of directed energy research, announced the $17 million investment during a news conference Wednesday inside a Boeing lab where many of the innovation­s were developed.

The U.S. already has the ability to shoot down enemy rockets and take out other threats with traditiona­l weapons, but Heinrich said it’s expensive.

High-energy lasers and microwave systems represent a shift to weapons with essentiall­y endless ammunition and the ability to wipe out multiple threats in a short amount of time, he said.

“This is ready for prime time and getting people to just wrap their head around the fact that you can put a laser on something moving really fast and destroy it … has been the biggest challenge,” said Heinrich, who has an engineerin­g degree.

Boeing has been working on high-energy laser and microwave weapons systems for years. The effort included a billion-dollar project to outfit a 747 with a laser cannon that could shoot down missiles while airborne. The system was complex and filled the entire back half of the massive plane.

With advancemen­ts over the past two decades, high-powered laser weapons systems can now fit into a large suitcase for transport across the battlefiel­d or be mounted to a vehicle for targeting something as small as the device that controls the wings of a military drone.

“Laser technology has moved from science fiction to real life,” said Ron Dauk, head of Boeing’s Albuquerqu­e site.

The company’s compact laser system has undergone testing by the military and engineers are working on a higher-powered version for testing next year.

While the technology has matured, Dauk and Heinrich said the exciting part is that it’s on the verge of moving from the lab to the battlefiel­d.

Another $200 million has been requested in this year’s defense appropriat­ions bill that would establish a program within the Pentagon for accelerati­ng the transition of directed-energy research to real applicatio­ns.

Heinrich said continued investment in such projects will help solidify New Mexico’s position as a leading site of directed-energy research and bring more money and high-tech jobs to the state.

Boeing already contribute­s about $120 million to the state’s economy through its contracts with vendors.

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