Record power-output tests mark a major milestone. Five remaining
flight laser modules near completion.
Northrop Grumman, a member of the team of contractors developing the Air
Force's Airborne Laser (ABL) system - Boeing (NYSE: BA), Northrop Grumman
(NYSE: Northrop Grumman) and Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) - has successfully
completed test-firings of the first flight laser module (LM-1).
The firings produced record power levels of 118 percent of the
laser's designed power output and exceeded the power requirements
of the ABL mission.
The ABL system will use six such laser modules to create a
megawatt-class chemical laser flying in a specially built Boeing
747-400F to shoot down missiles in the boost phase. The high-power
laser is coupled with a revolutionary optical system capable
of focusing a basketball-sized spot of heat that can burn through
a missile skin from hundreds of miles away. The laser and optical
systems are controlled by a sophisticated computer system that
can simultaneously track and prioritize potential targets.
˛We are extremely happy with Northrop Grumman's work on the laser and with
the potential this holds for the nation's missile defense program,"
said Col. Ellen Pawlikowski, director of the Airborne Laser
System Program Office at Kirtland AFB, N.M.
The series of laser performance tests, culminating more than
a year of integration and testing by Northrop Grumman, was completed in January
at the company's Capistrano Test Site in southern California.
Northrop Grumman is disassembling LM-1 in preparation for delivery to Edwards
Air Force Base for integration into ABL's flight system. The
company has also begun delivery of the components required for
the integration of the remaining five modules needed for the
first ABL-equipped 747.
"I'm very proud of the technical innovation and collaboration
within our team that helped us complete this test program,"
said Steve Hixson, Northrop Grumman's ABL program manager. "Not only did
the laser exceed performance goals, but our team overcame significant
engineering challenges, including demonstration of a new two-stage
turbo pump capable of the chemical flow rates required for full-power
lasing. The successful tests of LM-1 mark a major step forward
in overcoming the technical risk in developing the world's first
airborne directed energy weapon system."
Development of the ABL demonstrator now shifts to the ABL System
Integration Laboratory, a new facility at Edwards Air Force
Base, Calif. There the ABL team will assemble the five additional
laser modules, integrate them with LM-1, then perform a ground-based
demonstration of the integrated high-energy laser that will
fly on the first ABL system.
The LM-1 test program was conducted as part of Team ABL's Program
Development and Risk Reduction contract with the Air Force Space
& Missile Systems Center. The Airborne Laser program is managed
by the Air Force ABL system program office, Kirtland Air Force
Base, N.M., which reports to Aeronautical Systems Center, Wright-Patterson
AFB, Ohio. The Department of Defense Missile Defense Agency
(MDA) has management authority and funding responsibility for
the ABL program.
Boeing is leading the team selected by the U.S. Air Force to
develop and demonstrate the ABL. Team ABL includes Boeing, Lockheed
Martin and Northrop Grumman, working closely with the Air Force and MDA.
Boeing is responsible for developing the ABL surveillance BMC4I,
integrating the weapon system and supplying the modified 747-400
Freighter aircraft. Northrop Grumman is providing the complete chemical oxygen-iodine
laser system. Lockheed Martin is developing the beam control/fire
control system, which will acquire the target, then accurately
point and fire the laser.
For the latest news about the ABL program, visit the website
at www.airbornelaser.com.