2006 was a banner year for laser weapons at Northrop Grumman

Jan. 4, 2007
January 4, 2007, Redondo Beach, CA--Last year was one of the most successful on record for Northrop Grumman's high-energy laser systems. The company says they generated the most intense laser beams, the highest power levels, and the longest operating times yet seen in industry.

January 4, 2007, Redondo Beach, CA--Last year was one of the most successful on record for Northrop Grumman's high-energy laser systems. The company says they generated the most intense laser beams, the highest power levels, and the longest operating times yet seen in industry.

"By any standard, 2006 was one of the most successful years in the company's history of more than three decades of 'high-energy laser firsts,'" said Alexis Livanos, president of Northrop Grumman's Space Technology sector. "We are blazing new paths and identifying more uses at a record pace for this mature technology."

Mike McVey, vice president of Directed Energy Systems, noted that in addition to making laser weapons more flexible as missions expand, rapid advancements also are making them more affordable. "Laser weapons are becoming much less expensive compared with other solutions for force protection against indirect fire threats. We estimate that accomplishments in 2006 could easily translate into high-energy laser weapons costing one-fourth the total system cost of tactical missiles."

January 2006:
-Northrop Grumman Space Technology announced that it had been chosen by the U.S. military to develop a solid-state laser powerful enough (100 kW) to accomplish many force protection and strike missions under the Joint High Power Solid State Laser program.

-The company also announced delivery of the refurbished, high reliability Beacon Illuminator Laser (BILL) that demonstrated its robustness to The Boeing Company, prime contractor for the Airborne Laser, with hundreds of high power firings in 2006,

-Successful ABL high-power laser tests at the Systems Integration Laboratory at Edwards Air Force Base, CA, produced the required levels of power and run-time necessary to destroy a ballistic missile during its 'boost phase.'

July 2006:
-Based on proven technology, safety and performance of its legacy system, Skyguard, the company debuted a ground-based laser air defense system as a defense against rockets, missiles and mortars.

October 2006:
-The U.S. Department of Homeland Security selected Skyguard as a possible protection for civil aircraft and commercial airports from the threat of MANPAD-type missiles.

-The laser optical system for the ABL passed, ahead of schedule, a critical milestone, or Knowledge Point, set by the U.S. Missile Defense Agency (MDA) as a requirement for continued development of the first flight aircraft.

-The company introduced Vesta, a compact laser weapon powerful enough to protect fixed assets sites on the ground and precision strike by manned and unmanned aircraft. Vesta demonstrated world-record continuous wave brightness for a solid-state laser, according to the compnay.

-Northrop Grumman announced that the Strategic Illuminator (SILL) Laser developed for MDA. It achieved a new world record in brightness (power and beam quality) for a continuously pulsed, solid state laser. In addition, the SILL system employs advanced materials and packaging techniques to yield a smaller, lighter and more rugged laser compared with predecessors.

For more information, contact Northrop Grumman Space Technology.

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