Laser Mirrors May Get Testy

Laser weapons have a serious shortcoming, in the minds of some Pentagon thinkers. No, it’s not the fact that it takes giant vats of chemicals or a gazillion watts of power to get the beam machines to work. Or that a fair-sized rainstorm pretty much renders them useless. It’s that lasers can only zap as far as the eye can see. The beams don’t curve, so ray guns can’t reach over the horizon.

L-Mirror-3.jpgThe Defense Department’s Office of Force Transformation wants to change that, however, with a world-wide ring of giant mirrors, that would bounce laser light to wherever the Pentagon saw fit.

The transformation shop has been talking about this Tactical Relay Mirror System, or TRMS, for several years. Now, they may be ready to start some early-stage testing, Inside Defense reports.

“Some of the work that we’re doing on this is very advanced, and [has] come along very well,” Col. Craig Hughes said. “And certainly the test of the laboratory-sized aerospace relay mirror come this spring will be a significant development for us.”

Maybe the mirrors would be connected to a set of giant blimps, some have suggested. Maybe they’d be strapped onto robotic planes. But, strangely, Inside Defense notes, Hughes and his fellow mirror men seem to be tying their program to the star-crossed Airborne Laser, or ABL. That’s the 747, modified for ray gunning, that’s been sinking rather rapidly in the military’s estimation. Flight tests for the thing are now six years behind schedule, and the project was recently demoted down to a technology demonstrator,

“If you put [a mirror] on an airship right above ABL, you instantly double the range of ABL and eventually maybe these things can go into space.”

Considering that the ABL is the only part of this little scenario that’s anything more than a PowerPoint slide, however, I guess Hughes and Co. don’t really have a choice. Keep on blasting, boys.

9 Responses to “Laser Mirrors May Get Testy”

  1. pedestrian says:

    This should have been part of the black project that will never reach public eyes.

  2. Victoria Samson says:

    Best part? Where Hughes says, “Our key of course is managing expectations, we certainly don’t want to get to the point where we’re promising more than we can deliver.” That would be a nice change of pace from the way missile defense has been handled to date.

  3. Charles says:

    Hey cool! Just like in C&C Generals! Particle beam for the win. :/

  4. reefdiver says:

    I’ve got to believe that these lasers will be for high-speed, very secure communications – not ABM. Perhaps the new disinterest in ABM lasers is that various coatings could conceiveable be developed to defend against the laser. Read this: http://www.starlitetechnologies.com/ – its a fantastic lightweight coating that could protect not only missiles from lasers but everything from the shuttle, to skyscrapers and houses from extreme heat and fire. Interestingly (in a conspiracy fueling manner), although this product has been proven, its not appeared commercially (the Pentagon must have bought it…). Nonetheless, it would seem to me such products and other materials, may make the ABL useless except against the least technologically developed threat.

  5. Eric says:

    A global eavesdropping system? Windows reflect lasers and act as ear drums, but the angle would be wrong from space. Maybe you could overcome that by spending a gazillion dollars? I have no idea.

  6. man says:

    if we can see this whats hush hush?!

  7. freecham says:

    I think so;
    cool website :-)
    thanks
    Andy

  8. and says:

    I think so

  9. jonik says:

    cool site!

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