homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Zapping lasers: German military 50 kW laser can shoot down mortar projectiles from 2km away

We’re all familiar with laser weapons from SciFi movies and novels, but how far away is laser warfare from reality? Very close, if we’re to judge from the recently publicized test run of Rheinmetall Defense‘s 50kW high power laser that can melt through thick armor a kilometer away and shoot tiny mobile targets at twice the distance. […]

Tibi Puiu
January 7, 2013 @ 3:20 pm

share Share

50kw_Laserdemo_Bildleiste

We’re all familiar with laser weapons from SciFi movies and novels, but how far away is laser warfare from reality? Very close, if we’re to judge from the recently publicized test run of Rheinmetall Defense‘s 50kW high power laser that can melt through thick armor a kilometer away and shoot tiny mobile targets at twice the distance.

The German company laser is actually comprised of two combined laser modules mounted on Oerlikon Revolver Gun air defense turrets with additional modules for the power supply. Using their Beam Superimposing Technology (BST), the two lasers (20kW and 30Kw respectively) work together to focus on the same target for a combined power output of 50kW that wreaks havoc.

For instance, during a test at the company’s demo ground facility in Switzerland, the laser sliced through a 5mm- (~0.6 inches) thick steel girder from a kilometer away. But this was too easy. In a second run, the laser’s in-built radar was put to the test and used to detect drones nose diving at 50 meters per second (164 ft/s) from 3km away; the drones were then targeted and shot down from 2km away. Next, a crucial feature in the defense system’s projected application (air defense, asymmetric warfare and Counter Rocket, Artillery, Mortar (C-RAM) operations) was also tested: steel balls 82mm in diameter traveling at 50 meters per second, designed to simulate mortar projectiles, were honed in and obliterated instantly.

It’s important to note that performances were in no way altered by weather. In fact demonstrations were carried out with the same success rate during ice, rain, snow and/or extremely bright sunlight.

Only last year Rheinmetall tested a mere 10 kW version, while for next year the company plans on expanding to a 60kW laser and also upgrade the present system so that it can be fitted on top of a military SUV for mobility. If you found this impressive, remember that this information has been publicly handed out to the press and the media and was developed by a rather medium sized defense company; consider then what kind of laser weaponry the likes of China, Russia or the US dispose of, hidden away.

via Rheinmetall Defense

share Share

Big Tech Said It Was Impossible to Create an AI Based on Ethically Sourced Data. These Researchers Proved Them Wrong

A massive AI breakthrough built entirely on public domain and open-licensed data

Lawyers are already citing fake, AI-generated cases and it's becoming a problem

Just in case you're wondering how society is dealing with AI.

Leading AI models sometimes refuse to shut down when ordered

Models trained to solve problems are now learning to survive—even if we tell them not to.

AI slop is way more common than you think. Here's what we know

The odds are you've seen it too.

Scientists Invented a Way to Store Data in Plastic Molecules and It Could Someday Replace Hard Drives

What if your next hard drive wasn’t a box, but a string of molecules? Synthetic polymers promises to revolutionize data storage.

Meet Cavorite X7: An aircraft that can hover like a helicopter and fly like a plane

This unusual hybrid aircraft has sliding panels on its wings that cover hidden electric fans.

AI is quietly changing how we design our work

AI reshapes engineering, from sketches to skyscrapers, promising speed, smarts, and new creations.

Inside the Great Firewall: China’s Relentless Battle to Control the Internet

On the Chinese internet, a river crab isn’t just a crustacean. It’s code. River crab are Internet slang terms created by Chinese netizens in reference to the Internet censorship, or other kinds of censorship in mainland China. They need to do this because the Great Firewall of China censors and regulates everything that is posted […]

Anthropic's new AI model (Claude) will scheme and even blackmail to avoid getting shut down

In a fictional scenario, Claude blackmailed an engineer for having an affair.

Grok Won’t Shut Up About “White Genocide” Conspiracy Theories — Even When Asked About HBO or Other Random Things

Regardless of the context Grok, it seems, is being used to actively push a topic onto its users.