DARPA Wants Super-Power Lasers for Imaging, Sensing, Targeting
URL: http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/43449
July 10, 2009
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CuttingEdge100
URL: http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/43449
July 10, 2009
DARPA said it expects the new laser technology to draw from phased array concepts that revolutionized RADAR systems
The extreme scientists at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency today said they want to develop a laser system the goes way beyond today’s opto-mechanical, acousto-optical or electro-optical systems to establish photonic integrated circuit (PIC) technology that will provide video frame rate beam steering speeds, and emit multiple beams with a total output power of 10 W.
DARPA said Opto-mechanical scanning devices are usually bulky and relatively slow, while acousto- and electro-optical technologies utilize devices that while small in size, cannot provide the steering speeds and versatility necessary for many of the advanced applications the military envisions.
Known as the SWEEPER, which is wicked short for short-range wide-field-of-view extremely-agile electronically-steered photonic emitters, DARPA said it expects the new laser technology to draw from phased array concepts that revolutionized RADAR systems.
DARPA said it expects SWEEPER will provide a compact, agile alternative to mechanically steered technology, and recognizing the recent advances in photonic device density, circuit complexity, and performance capabilities in the emerging PIC technology, the SWEEPER program should extend phased array beam steering to the optical domain in the near infra red (0.8 to 2 μm range) by developing PIC technology for optical phased arrays. Such arrays will require the integration of thousand of closely packed optical emitting facets, precise relative electronic phase control of these components, and all within a very small form factor with a total output power of 10W, DARPA stated.
The idea is that such an array of emitters allow agile laser beam steering but also beam forming and multiple beam generation, greatly tons of application possibilities, such as surveillance, 3D imaging, precision targeting, fusing, IFF/tagging, terminal guidance, navigation, chem-bio sensing, ballistic detection, and point-to-point low probability of intercept (LPI) communication.
DARPA is also networking radars together. Its NetTrack program uses airborne radars to gather features of moving vehicles and pass that information over a network to maintain tracking information over extended periods. This network of radars will allow us to track the enemy even if they move behind obstructions or into urban canyons.
What are your opinions on the matter?
CuttingEdge100