Aviation Week.....
New Budget Darling May Be Directed-Energy
After decades of promises, directed-energy weapons appear headed for near-term operational use and may be led there by electronic attack programs under development for the military.
The lightning rod for rapid fielding of directed-energy devices and advanced sensors will be the U.S. services’ next-generation jammers, which will likely feature active, electronically scanned arrays and high-power microwave (HPM) capabilities. In Pentagon discussions, HPM is now being called “anti-electronics weaponry.†Power surges created by pulses of HPM can damage or destroy electronic components and addle or erase computer memories. How HPM, high-power lasers and jammers might be integrated is still a work in progress. That directed energy and its associated technologies (such as intelligence gathering, surveillance, cyberattack and electronic warfare) may be focused and accelerated by some of the new electronic attack programs was suggested by David Honey. He is chief of policy and oversight for the Defense Department’s science and technology programs.
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After decades of promises, directed-energy weapons appear headed for near-term operational use and may be led there by electronic attack programs under development for the military.
The lightning rod for rapid fielding of directed-energy devices and advanced sensors will be the U.S. services’ next-generation jammers, which will likely feature active, electronically scanned arrays and high-power microwave (HPM) capabilities. In Pentagon discussions, HPM is now being called “anti-electronics weaponry.†Power surges created by pulses of HPM can damage or destroy electronic components and addle or erase computer memories. How HPM, high-power lasers and jammers might be integrated is still a work in progress. That directed energy and its associated technologies (such as intelligence gathering, surveillance, cyberattack and electronic warfare) may be focused and accelerated by some of the new electronic attack programs was suggested by David Honey. He is chief of policy and oversight for the Defense Department’s science and technology programs.
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