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RE: [cdn-nucl-l] U of Sask Synchrotron: Canadian Light Source



	To: "cdn-nucl-l" <cdn-nucl-l@mailman1.cis.mcmaster.ca>, "ANS Member
Exchange Listserv" <mbrexchange@list.ans.org> 
	Subject: [cdn-nucl-l] U of Sask Synchrotron: Canadian Light Source 
	From: "Jerry Cuttler" <jerrycuttler@rogers.com> 
	Sent: Thu, 21 Oct 2004 12:20:32 -0400 

	More ...
	------------------------
	
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20041020.wlight1020/BNSto
ry/Technology/

	Flipping on the light switch of millions of suns

	<SNIP>

How about an airborne version ? (slightly different application)

Check this out :


http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/airborne_laser_techwed_041117.html
The Power of Light: An Airborne Laser for Missile Defense
By Tariq Malik
Staff Writer
17 November 2004

The U.S. military is gearing up to test what might be the ultimate version
of laser tag.

With a successful ground test in the bag, the Missile Defense Agency is
pushing forward with plans for an Airborne Laser (ABL), a Boeing 747
freighter aircraft with a laser-tipped nose designed to destroy ballistic
missiles as they rocket through the sky.  

The defense system's primary weapon -- a megawatt-class chemical laser beam
-- passed an initial ground-based test last week and a number subsystems
have been integrated into the ABL aircraft, Missile Defense Agency (MDA)
officials told SPACE.com. If all goes well, a integrated prototype of the
Airborne Laser will soon be shooting down missiles in tests over the Pacific
Ocean. 

"This is a wonderful moment for the Missile Defense Agency and the
proponents of a ballistic missile defense around the world," said Col. Ellen
Pawlikowski, ABL program director, during a Nov. 12 statement announcing the
successful ground-firing. 

Under development since 1996, the $1.1-billion ABL project aims to use a
powerful, turret-mounted laser to disable enemy ballistic missiles during
their boost phase by heating a basket-ball sized portion of the projectile's
skin until it buckles.

Because of it's speed-of-light ability to kill, the ABL is the only system
under testing that is able to detect and engage enemy missiles in their most
vulnerable boost phases, MDA Airborne Laser officials said in response to
written questions. 

The Missile Defense Agency and U.S. Air Force is working in tandem with
Boeing, Northrop Grumman and Lockheed Martin to develop the flying laser
system. Boeing is providing the aircraft, battle management and system
integration, while Northrup Grumman has developed the laser and Lockheed
Martin the weapon's flight turret. 

Some ABL developers have said integrated flight tests could occur by the end
of the year.  In a Nov. 12 announcement, MDA officials said tests of the
ABL's main laser would take several months, as engineers fine-tune the
weapon and work to increase its firing time.

Lasers in the sky

While the primary weapon behind the ABL missile defense system is its
Chemical, Oxygen, Iodine Laser (COIL), the aircraft is equipped with three
other lasers and six infrared sensors that detect, track and target enemy
targets. None of the ABL lasers -- including its primary weapon -- are
visible to the naked eye, though MDA officials said they could be imaged in
the infrared spectrum.

Six COIL modules -- each the size of a Chevy Suburban sport utitlity vehicle
set on end -- work together to produce ABL's megawatt energy beam, which set
fire to dust particles as it burned into a metal wall during a Nov. 10
ground test at Edwards Air Force Base in California. The entire test lasted
just a fraction of a second.

"What's important is that the COIL produced photons," Pawlikowski said.
"This proves the laser hardware is ready to go." 

The COIL system is fueled by a syrupy mix of hydrogen, oxygen and salts that
combine to make Basic Hydrogen Peroxide, a volatile compound about 20 times
more viscous than water, MDA officials said.

Battle management

Picking the most threatening target from a group of missiles, destroying it
and moving on to the next one during a battle would have to occur faster
than human gunners could operate, MDA officials said. 

MDA designers anticipate enemy missiles to travel an average of about 4,000
miles (6,437 kilometers) an hour, and require a firing system capably of
destroying those targets from distance of 100 miles (160 kilometers). 

Instead, a computerized battle management system developed by Boeing
controls the system, with human weapons crewmembers setting operational
limits and providing any necessary mission modifications in flight. The
system has successfully tracked Minutemen 2 [intercontinental nukes] and
Lance [theatre] missiles, as well as the afterburner plumes of F-16 jets
[applicable to cruise missiles as well - easier to hit, due to low
speed...].

MDA officials said the first ABL aircraft will serve as a research and
development prototype, though it may have some "residual operational
capability" once testing is complete. 

Building the turret

Once ground tests are completed, the COIL modules will be installed in the
aft end of the ABL aircraft, which Boeing engineers have extensively
modified to handle the missile defense system. MDA officials said aircraft
engineers left almost no part of the freighter untouched during its two-year
refitting. 

Perhaps the aircraft's most noticeable outward change to Boeing's 747-400
freighter is the bulbous turret that houses a 5-foot (1.5-meter) telescope
serving as the exit point for the ABL weapon. [see photo links below]

Designed to whip around and target enemy missiles, the ball-shaped turret is
10 feet (3 meters) in diameter and housed in an assembly that stretches 14
feet (4.2 meters) long, said Paul Shattuck, ABL technical lead at Lockheed
Martin, in a telephone interview.

Composite materials keep the turret's weight to about 11,000 pounds (4,989
kilograms) which while heavy is much less than if it were built out of
aluminum or other traditional aircraft materials, he added.

"This is all first-of-a-kind hardware," Shattuck said. "I'm excited and I
can't wait to get it in the air."
============

Pictures :

http://www.space.com/images/h_abl_artist_02.jpg
An artist's interpretation of the Airborne Laser aircraft in action. Credit:
Boeing/Mike Casad/ABL. 

http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/abl/pics-clips/abl15.html
This diagram shows the locations of various systems within the Airborne
Laser aircraft. ABL team members are responsible for various elements of the
system: Boeing is responsible for supplying the 747-400 Freighter,
developing crew safety and the Battle Management system. Lockheed Martin is
responsible for the nose-mounted turret, illuminator lasers and beam-control
system. Northrop Grumman is responsible for the system's high-energy laser.
Credit: Boeing/ABL.

http://www.space.com/images/h_turretball_window_02.jpg
Lockheed Martin Space Systems engineer in the company's Sunnyvale, Calif.
facility inspects the Turret Ball Conformal Window on the Flight Turret
Assembly for the Airborne Laser. The window is the exit for the High Energy
Laser and exit and return window for the Beacon Illuminator and Tracker
Illuminator lasers. Credit: Lockheed Martin. 
---------------------

Boeing's ABL web site :
http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/abl/flash.html

ABL roll-out and first flight : 
http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/abl/pics-clips/rollout_outdoors
.html
http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/abl/pics-clips/02_27d.html
http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/abl/pics-clips/02_27c.html
http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/abl/pics-clips/aar1_above.html



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