Laser weapon
View on Wikipedia

A laser weapon[2] is a type of directed-energy weapon (DEW) that uses lasers to inflict damage. Laser weapons are of two types: low-power laser dazzlers that blind optical systems or human eyes, and high-power lasers that can physically damage or destroy targets, such as enemy aircraft, drones, and missiles.
One of the major issues with laser weapons is atmospheric thermal blooming, which is still largely unsolved. This issue is exacerbated when there is fog, smoke, dust, rain, snow, smog, foam, or purposely dispersed obscurant chemicals present. In essence, a laser generates a beam of light that requires clear air or a vacuum to operate.[3]

Low-power lasers have the potential to serve as non-lethal weapons. They can cause temporary or permanent vision loss. The extent, nature, and duration of visual impairment depend on factors including the laser's power, wavelength(s), beam collimation and orientation, and duration of exposure. Lasers with a power output of less than one watt can cause permanent vision loss. The Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons bans weapons designed to cause permanent blindness. Weapons designed to cause temporary blindness, known as dazzlers, are in a separate category. Multiple incidents of pilots exposed to lasers while flying have been recorded.[4]
High-power laser weapons capable of damaging or destroying a target are experimental as of 2026. The use of laser-beam weaponry to destroy aerial targets has been under development for years. The United States Navy tested short-range (1 mile), 30-kW Laser Weapon System or LaWS for use against targets such as small UAVs, rocket-propelled grenades, and visible motorboat or helicopter engines.[5][6] A 60 kW system, HELIOS, was under development for destroyer-class ships as of 2020[update].[7] India's DRDO successfully tested a 30 kW DEW, designated Mk-II (A) DEW, in April 2025 which could annihilate drones at a range of 5 km.[8]
Air defense systems
[edit]DEW for the destruction of incoming missiles are under development. One example is Boeing Airborne Laser, deployed inside a Boeing 747 and designated as YAL-1. This system was designed to eliminate short- and intermediate-range ballistic missiles during their boost phase.[9] It was canceled in 2012.
Another system was studied under the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) and successor programs. This project aimed to employ ground-based or space-based laser systems to destroy incoming intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). However, various practical challenges, such as aiming a laser over a large distance through the atmosphere, complicated implementation. Optical scattering and refraction bent and distorted the beam, complicating aiming and reducing its efficiency.
A related concept was the nuclear-pumped X-ray laser, an orbiting atomic bomb surrounded by laser media in the form of glass rods. When a bomb detonated, the rods would be exposed to highly-energetic gamma-ray photons, causing spontaneous and stimulated emission of X-ray photons within the rod atoms. This process would result in optical amplification of the X-ray photons, generating an X-ray beam that was little affected by atmospheric distortion and capable of destroying ICBMs in flight. However, the X-ray laser became a single-use device, as it would destroy itself upon activation. Some initial tests were conducted with underground nuclear testing, but the results were not promising.
Iron Beam
[edit]Iron Beam is a laser-based air defense system which was unveiled at the Singapore Airshow on 11 February 2014[10] by Israeli defense contractor Rafael Advanced Defense Systems.[11] The system is designed to destroy short-range rockets, artillery, and mortar bombs; it has a range of up to 7 km (4.3 mi), too close for the Iron Dome system to intercept projectiles effectively.[11][12] In addition, the system could also intercept unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).[13] Iron Beam will constitute the sixth element of Israel's integrated air defense system,[11] in addition to Arrow 2, Arrow 3, David's Sling, Barak 8, and Iron Dome.[14]
Iron Beam uses a fiber laser to destroy an airborne target. Whether acting as a stand-alone system or with external cueing as part of an air-defense system, a threat is detected by a surveillance system and tracked by vehicle platforms in order to engage.[15]
Iron Beam is expected to be operational by the end of 2025.[16][17]
Anti-drone systems
[edit]
In the 21st century, several countries have developed anti-drone laser systems to counter the increasing threat of small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). These systems are designed to detect, track, and destroy drones using high-powered lasers, offering a cost-effective and flexible solution for airspace protection.
In the United States, Lockheed Martin demonstrated the capabilities of its ATHENA laser system in 2017, which uses a 30-kilowatt ALADIN laser to target and destroy UAVs.[18] Another American company, Raytheon, developed the High-Energy Laser Weapon System (HELWS) in 2019, which is capable of detecting and destroying drones at a distance of up to three kilometers.[18]
Turkey has also invested in the development of laser weapons, with companies like Roketsan producing the ALKA system, which combines laser and electromagnetic weapons to incapacitate and destroy single or group targets.[18] Other Turkish companies, such as Aselsan and TUBITAK BILGEM, have also demonstrated laser systems capable of targeting small UAVs and explosive devices.[18]
Germany is another leader in the development of combat laser systems, with defense company Rheinmetall working on stationary and mobile versions of its High Energy Laser (HEL) system since the 2000s.[18] Rheinmetall's lasers are designed to protect against a variety of threats, including small and medium-sized UAVs, helicopters, missiles, mines, and artillery shells.[18]
Israel has also been actively developing laser weapons, with companies like Rafael Advanced Defense Systems demonstrating the compact Drone Dome system in 2020, which is designed to destroy UAVs and their swarms.[18] Another Israeli system, called Light Blade, was developed by OptiDefense to counter terrorist threats such as mini UAVs and explosive devices attached to balloons or kites.[18]
The development and deployment of these anti-drone laser systems show the increasing importance of protecting airspace from emerging threats, while also providing a cost-effective and flexible solution for defense forces around the world.
First announced in December 2024, on April 13 2025, the Ukrainian Unmanned Systems Forces released the first footage of a laser weapon system, called “Tryzub”, in use destroying a fibre optic FPV drone. It is fitted into the back of a van and can be used against ground targets.[19]
On 16 May 2025, Ukraine revealed a small laser turret called SlimBeam, fitted to a remote controlled weapon station, capable of blinding optical sensors at 2 km and destroying drones at 800 meters. It can be remotely operated by a web-based system to reduce the risk to the operators of enemy fire. It could also be used for sabotage by targeting various locks or other objects.[20]
Electrolaser
[edit]An electrolaser first ionizes its target path, and then sends an electric current down the conducting track of ionized plasma, somewhat like lightning. It functions as a giant, high-energy, long-distance version of the Taser or stun gun.
Pulsed energy projectile
[edit]Pulsed Energy Projectile or PEP systems emit an infrared laser pulse which creates rapidly expanding plasma at the target. The resulting sound, shock and electromagnetic waves stun the target and cause pain and temporary paralysis. The weapon is under development and is intended as a non-lethal weapon in crowd control, though it can also be used as a lethal weapon.
Dazzler
[edit]A dazzler is a directed-energy weapon intended to temporarily blind or disorient its target with intense directed radiation. Targets can include sensors or human vision. Dazzlers emit infrared or invisible light against various electronic sensors, and visible light against humans, when they are intended to cause no long-term damage to eyes. The emitters are usually lasers, making what is termed a laser dazzler. Most of the contemporary systems are man-portable, and operate in either the red (a laser diode) or green (a diode-pumped solid-state laser, DPSS) areas of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Initially developed for military use, non-military products are becoming available for use in law enforcement and security.[21][22]

The personnel halting and stimulation response rifle (PHASR) is a prototype non-lethal laser dazzler developed by the Air Force Research Laboratory's Directed Energy Directorate, U.S. Department of Defense.[23] Its purpose is to temporarily disorient and blind a target. Blinding laser weapons have been tested in the past, but were banned under the 1995 United Nations Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons, which the United States acceded to on 21 January 2009.[24] The PHASR rifle, a low-intensity laser, is not prohibited under this regulation, as the blinding effect is intended to be temporary. It also uses a two-wavelength laser.[25] The PHASR was tested at Kirtland Air Force Base, part of the Air Force Research Laboratory Directed Energy Directorate in New Mexico.
- ZM-87
- PY132A is a Chinese anti-drone dazzler.[26]
- Soviet laser pistol was a prototype weapon designed for cosmonauts.
- Optical Dazzling Interdictor, Navy (AN/SEQ-4 ODIN) is a U.S. laser to be field tested in 2019 on an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer.[27]
Operational use
[edit]On 19 November 2025, British Defence Secretary John Healey, stated that the Russian intelligence-gathering vessel Yantar had entered the United Kingdom’s wider waters north of Scotland during the previous weeks,[28][29] and was allegedly engaging in espionage and the mapping of UK's undersea cables.[28][29] In response, the UK deployed a Royal Navy frigate and RAF P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft to monitor and track the ship, during which Yantar reportedly directed dazzler system lasers at British pilots.[29][28] Healey described the Russian actions as "deeply dangerous", noting that this was the second visit of Yantar to UK waters in the same year, and warning that Britain was prepared to respond if the vessel attempted to travel further south.[28][29]
Examples
[edit]Leading Western companies in the development of laser weapons have been Boeing, Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin, Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research, Rheinmetall and MBDA.[30][31][32][33][34]
| Name | Description | Proposed power level | Year | Status | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Project Excalibur | United States government nuclear weapons research program to develop a nuclear pumped x-ray laser as a directed energy weapon for ballistic missile defense. | Megawatts | 1980s | Canceled | [35] |
| Soviet laser pistol | First handheld laser weapon intended for use by cosmonauts in outer space. Used pyrotechnic flashbulb technology. | Handheld | 1984 | No longer used | |
| 1K17 Szhatie | Experimental Soviet self-propelled laser weapon, with a 15-lenses high-powered solid-state laser emitter. | 1990 | Never went beyond the experimental stage | ||
| 17F19DM Polyus/Skif-DM | Soviet laser-armed orbital weapon that failed during deployment. Laser derived from the Beriev A-60. | 1000kW | 1987 | Failed | |
| Terra-3 | Soviet laser facility thought to be a powerful anti-satellite weapon prototype; later found to be a testing site with limited satellite tracking capabilities. | 5kW; originally estimated to be up to 1MW | 1979 | Abandoned, partially disassembled | |
| US Army Missile Command laser | Ruggedized tunable laser emitting narrow-linewidth in the yellow-orange-red part of the spectrum. | 1991 | Never went beyond the experimental stage | [36] | |
| Boeing YAL-1 | Airborne gas or chemical laser mounted in a modified Boeing 747, intended to shoot down incoming ballistic missiles over enemy territory. | 1000kW | 2000s | Canceled, scrapped | [37][38][39][40][41] |
| Precision Airborne Standoff Directed Energy Weapon | Directed energy weapon project | 100KW or more | 2008 | Canceled | |
| Laser Close-In Weapon System | Anti-aircraft laser unveiled at the Farnborough Airshow. | 2010 | Experimental | [42][43] | |
| ZEUS-HLONS (HMMWV Laser Ordnance Neutralization System) | First laser and energy weapon used on a battlefield for neutralizing mines and unexploded ordnance. | 1kW | 2002 | Niche application | |
| Mid-Infrared Advanced Chemical Laser (MIRACL) | Experimental U.S. Navy deuterium fluoride laser tested against an Air Force satellite | 1000kW | 1997 | Canceled | |
| Maritime Laser Demonstrator (MLD) | Laser for use aboard U.S. Navy warships, mounted on the former USS Paul F. Foster (in its role as the Self Defense Test Ship) and successfully tested in 2011 by sinking a small inflatable motorboat at a range of one mile in rough seas. Original tests used a 15kW laser, proposed to be scaled up to 100kW. | 15-100kW | 2011–2014 | Active deployment | [44][45][46][47] |
| Personnel Halting and Stimulation Response (PHaSR) | Non-lethal hand-held weapon developed by the United States Air Force's Directed Energy Directorate to "dazzle" or stun a target | Handheld | 2005 | Status unknown | [48] |
| Tactical High Energy Laser (THEL) | Weaponized deuterium fluoride laser developed in a joint research project by Israel and the U.S. for shooting down aircraft and missiles | 2000-2005 | Discontinued | [49] | |
| Beriev A-60 | Soviet/Russian CO2 gas laser mounted on an Ilyushin Il-76MD transport. Two units built, with one of them sporting the 1LK222 Sokol Eshelon laser system. | 1000kW | 1981-2016 | Experimental | [50] |
| High Energy Laser-Mobile Demonstrator (HEL-MD) | A laser system mounted on a Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Truck (HEMTT) designed by Boeing. Its current power level is 10 kW, which will be boosted to 50 kW, and expected to eventually be upgraded to 100 kW. Targets that can be engaged are mortar rounds, artillery shells and rockets, unmanned aerial vehicles, and cruise missiles. | 10-100kW | Status unknown | [51] | |
| Fiber Laser developed by Lockheed Martin | A 60 kW fiber laser developed by Lockheed Martin to be mounted on the HEMTT that maintains beam quality at high power outputs while using less electricity than solid-state lasers. | 60kW | 2014 | Status unknown | [52][53][54] |
| Free-electron laser | FEL technology is being evaluated by the US Navy as a candidate for an antiaircraft and anti-missile directed-energy weapon. The Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility's FEL has demonstrated over 14 kW power output. Compact multi-megawatt class FEL weapons are undergoing research. | 14kW or more | Ongoing | [55][56][57][58][59] | |
| Portable Efficient Laser Testbed (PELT) | Directed energy weapon project, intended as an anti-riot less-lethal weapon | Status unknown | [60][61] | ||
| Laser AirCraft CounterMeasures (ACCM) | Directed energy weapon project | Status unknown | [62] | ||
| Mobile Expeditionary High-Energy Laser (MEHEL) 2.0 | Experimental directed energy weapon integrated on Stryker 8x8 armored vehicle. | Experimental | [63][64] | ||
| Advanced Test High Energy Asset (ATHENA) | Directed energy weapon project. | Status unknown | [65] | ||
| Self-Protect High-Energy Laser Demonstrator (SHiELD) | Directed energy weapon project to protect aircraft from missiles. | 50kW | 2016 | Cancelled | [66] |
| Silent Hunter (laser weapon) | Chinese fiber-optic laser air-defense system. Described as being able to penetrate five 2 millimeter steel plates at a range of 800 meters and 5 millimeters of steel at 1,000 meters. | 30kW or more | 2017 | Operational | [67][68][69] |
| Russian Sokol Eshelon | Experimental airborne laser weapon developed by Russia, mounted on the Beriev A-60. | Experimental | |||
| Russian Peresvet | Mobile air-defense laser undergoing service testing as close-range mobile ICBM escorts. | Undergoing service testing | [70] | ||
| Raytheon laser | High-energy laser developed by Raytheon Company that can be mounted on a MRZR and used to disable an unmanned aerial system from approximately 1 mile away. | Status unknown | [71] | ||
| ZKZM-500 | Short-range antipersonnel less-lethal weapon that reportedly uses a laser to cause temporary blindness, skin burns, and pain. Existence disputed. | Status unknown | [72] | ||
| Northrop Grumman electric laser | Electric laser capable of producing a 100-kilowatt ray of light, with potential to be mounted in aircraft, ship, or vehicle. | 100kW | 2009 | Experimental | [73][74] |
| Skyguard (area defense system) | Proposed area defense system. | Proposed | |||
| Area Defense Anti-Munitions (ADAM) | Experimental fiber laser developed by Lockheed Martin. Tested at 10 kilowatts against rockets. | 10kW | Ongoing development | [75][76] | |
| Almaz HEL | Russian truck-mounted directed energy weapon. | Status unknown | [77] | ||
| Boeing Laser Avenger | Small anti-drone weapon mounted on an AN/TWQ-1 Avenger combat vehicle. | Tens of kW | 2007 | Experimental | |
| High Energy Liquid Laser Area Defense System (HELLADS) | Counter-RAM aircraft or truck-mounted laser under development by General Atomics under a DARPA contract. 150 kilowatt goal. | 150kW | 2004 | Status unknown | |
| ARMOL | Turkish laser weapon that passed acceptance tests in 2019. | 2019 | Experimental | [78] | |
| AN/SEQ-3 Laser Weapon System (LaWS) | 30 kW directed-energy weapon developed by the United States. Field tested on USS Ponce in 2014 and later moved to USS Portland (LPD-27) after Ponce was decommissioned. The AN/SEQ-3 development has been superseded by the HELIOS which also has better tracking of small drones. | 30kW | 2014 | Fielded Prototype | [5][79] |
| HELMA-P | 2 kW anti-drone weapon for the French military designed by CILAS and Ariane Group with a range of up to one kilometre. Developed between 2017-2019, land trials were undertaken in 2020 and 2021 while 12–14 June 2023 it was trialled at sea aboard the French destroyer Forbin mounted inside a shipping container. The developer aims to increase its output to 5 kW. | 2-5kW | 2017 | Prototype | [80] |
| India's laser weapon | 1 kW truck-mounted laser weapon tested by DRDO in August 2017 in Chitradurga ATR. Can create a hole in a metal sheet kept at a distance of 250 meters in 36 seconds. | 1kW | 2013 | Technology demonstrator | [81] |
| Integrated Drone Detection and Interdiction System | 2 kW truck-mounted laser weapon developed by DRDO and operated by the Indian Army along Line of Control. Seven units in service, 9 more to be ordered. Range: 1 km | 2kW | 2015 | Operational | [8][82] |
| Integrated Drone Detection and Interdiction System Mk-II | Based on 10 kW Chemical Oxygen Iodine Laser (COIL) technology demonstrator. Range: 2 km. Indian Army and Air Force expected to order 16 systems. | 10kW | Production | [83][84][81] | |
| DRDO Mk-II (A) DEW | 30 kW truck-mounted laser weapon and utilises integral electro-optical fire-control system. Based on 10 kW Chemical Oxygen Iodine Laser (COIL) technology demonstrator. Range: 5 km against fixed-wing drones, helicopters, missiles. | 30kW | Testing and Production | [8][81] | |
| DRDO Surya | 300 kW laser weapon system Range: 20 km. | 300kW | In development | [8][85] | |
| DragonFire | 50 kW scalable laser directed-energy weapon in development by the United Kingdom intended for use against small boats, drones and artillery shells/missiles. Completed the first two of four planned service acceptance trials in 2022. Sea trials aboard a Type 23 frigate are due to begin in 2023 and run for two years. Land based vehicle mounted applications as a point defence system are also being considered. | 50kW | 2017 | In development | [86][87] |
| High Energy Laser with Integrated Optical-dazzler and Surveillance (HELIOS) | A 60 kW laser weapon system to be tested on an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer and intended for use against small boats and drones, future versions may also be powerful enough to target missiles or aircraft. Unlike the preceding LaWS which attempted to synchronise six separate fiber lasers into a single coherent beam the HELIOS has Spectral Beam Combination where several individual wavelengths of laser are overlapped on top of each other through a single fiber optic emitter. No longer relying on a burst of accumulated capacitor energy also grants a new capability for sustained low emission to dazzle a drone. | 60kW | 2021 | Prototype | [27] |
| Pulsed energy projectile (PEP) | A truck-mounted, riot control, less-lethal laser weapon designed for crowd control | Status unknown | |||
| Technology Maturation Laser Weapon System Demonstrator (LWSD) | A laser weapon system installed on the USS Portland (LPD-27) that successfully destroyed a small unmanned aerial vehicle in May 2020 | 2020 | Experimental | [27][88] | |
| Iron Beam | An Israeli laser weapon system for anti-rocket, anti-drone close range defense. | 100kW | 2025 | In development | [89][90] |
| Light Blade | An Israeli laser system deployed as part of the Iron Dome defense system to shoot down balloons | 2020 | In use | [91] | |
| Minotaur | Developed by Hellenic company Soukos Robotics, the SR-42 is a large anti-drone system consisting of radio jammer, microwave jammer, optical dazzler, 12.7mm gun and laser weapon mounted on a unmanned BTR 8×8 vehicle and was unveiled at the Defence Exhibition Athens (DEFEA) in July 2021. It is designed to hit drones every 2–3 seconds with 62 individual blue-violet lasers forming a combined output of 300 kW, its engagement range is 1 to 25 km, up to an altitude of 10 km. However to reduce thermal signature it is powered entirely by batteries with no onboard power generation giving a maximum engagement duration of 2 hours.[92] The SR-32 is version of the same laser and microwave jammer mounted on a towed trailer, it has 26 lasers producing a combined output of 100 kW with a range of 1 to 10 Km and a ceiling of 1.7 Km | 5kW each laser | 2021 | Experimental | [93] |
| Cheongwang Block I Laser | South Korean Hanwha Aerospace 20-kW anti-drone system. Demonstrated in 2023, officially integrated into active service on October 4, 2024.[94] | 20kW | 2024 | In deployment | [95] |
| 10 kW-Class High-Power Laser EW Vehicle | Japanese 10-kW anti-drone system. Entered into service in November 2024. | 10kW | 2024 | In deployment | [96] |
| ODIN - Optical Dazzling Interdictor, Navy | Installed on 8 US Navy warships as of 2024 the ODIN uses a dazzling laser on incoming drone and missile sensors and cameras to confuse them so that they cannot guide correctly or find their target. While primarily designed for uncrewed flying objects, the system could also be used on crewed vehicles to cause glare in a pilot’s vision. | Tens of kW | 2020 | in deployment | [97] |

Most of these projects have been canceled, discontinued, never went beyond the prototype or experimental stage, or are only used in niche applications like dazzling, blinding, mine clearance or close defense against small, unprotected targets. Effective, high performance laser weapons seem to be difficult to achieve using current or near-future technology.[98][99][100]
Problems
[edit]Laser beams begin to cause plasma breakdown in the atmosphere at energy densities of around one megajoule per cubic centimeter. This effect, called "blooming," causes the laser to defocus and disperse energy into the surrounding air. Blooming can be more severe if there is fog, smoke, dust, rain, snow, smog, or foam in the air.
Techniques that may reduce these effects include:
- Spreading the beam across a large, curved mirror that focuses the power on the target, to keep energy density en route too low for blooming to happen. This requires a large, very precise, fragile mirror, mounted somewhat like a searchlight, requiring bulky machinery to slew the mirror to aim the laser.
- Using a phased array. For typical laser wavelengths, this method would require billions of micrometer-size antennae. There is currently no known way to implement these, though carbon nanotubes have been proposed. Phased arrays could theoretically also perform phase-conjugate amplification (see below). Phased arrays do not require mirrors or lenses, and can be made flat and thus do not require a turret-like system (as in "spread beam") to be aimed, though range will suffer if the target is at extreme angles to the surface of the phased array.[101]
- Using a phase-conjugate laser system. This method employs a "finder" or "guide" laser illuminating the target. Any mirror-like ("specular") points on the target reflect light that is sensed by the weapon's primary amplifier. The weapon then amplifies inverted waves, in a positive feedback loop, destroying the target, with shockwaves as the specular regions evaporate. This avoids blooming because the waves from the target pass through the blooming, and therefore show the most conductive optical path; this automatically corrects for the distortions caused by blooming. Experimental systems using this method usually use special chemicals to form a "phase-conjugate mirror". In most systems, however, the mirror overheats dramatically at weapon-useful power levels.
- Using a very short pulse that finishes before blooming interferes, but this requires a very high power laser to concentrate large amounts of energy in that pulse which does not exist in a weaponized or easily weaponizable form.[a]
- Focusing multiple lasers of relatively low power on a single target. This is increasingly bulky as the total power of the system increases.
Countermeasures
[edit]Essentially, a laser generates a beam of light which will be delayed or stopped by any opaque medium and perturbed by any translucent or less than perfectly transparent medium just like any other type of light. A simple, dense smoke screen can and will often block a laser beam. Infrared or multi-spectrum[102] smoke grenades or generators will also disturb or block infrared laser beams. Any opaque case, cowling, bodywork, fuselage, hull, wall, shield or armor will absorb at least the "first impact" of a laser weapon, so the beam must be sustained to achieve penetration.
The Chinese People's Liberation Army has invested in the development of specialized coatings that can deflect beams fired by U.S. military lasers. Laser light can be deflected, reflected, or absorbed by manipulating physical and chemical properties of materials. Artificial coatings can counter certain specific types of lasers, but a different type of laser may match the coating's absorption spectrum enough to transfer damaging amounts of energy. The coatings are made of several different substances, including low-cost metals, rare earths, carbon fiber, silver, and diamonds that have been processed to fine sheens and tailored against specific laser weapons. China is developing anti-laser defenses because protection against them is considered far cheaper than creating competing laser weapons.[103]
Dielectric mirrors, inexpensive ablative coatings, thermal transport delay, and obscurants are also being studied as countermeasures.[104] In not a few operational situations, even simple, passive countermeasures like rapid rotation (which spreads the heat and does not allow a fixed targeting point except in strictly frontal engagements), higher acceleration (which increases the distance and changes the angle quickly), or agile maneuvering during the terminal attack phase (which hampers the ability to target a vulnerable point, forces a constant re-aiming or tracking with close to zero lag, and allows for some cooling) can defeat or help to defeat non-highly pulsed, high-energy laser weapons.[105]
In popular culture
[edit]Arthur C. Clarke envisaged particle beam weapons in his 1955 novel Earthlight, in which energy would be delivered by high-velocity beams of matter.[106] After the invention of the laser in 1960, it briefly became the death ray of choice for science fiction writers.[107] By the late 1960s and 1970s, as the laser's limits as a weapon became evident, the ray gun began to be replaced by similar weapons with names that better reflected the destructive capabilities of the device, such as the blaster in Star Wars or phasers in Star Trek, which were originally lasers.
See also
[edit]- Directed-energy weapon
- Laser sight
- Space weapon
- Weapons in science fiction
- 2026 Texas and New Mexico airspace closures – sudden closures of US airspace reportedly prompted by anti-drone laser weapon use
References
[edit]- ^ "US and Israel Shelved Laser as a Defense". The New York Times. 30 July 2006.
- ^ "Directed Energy".
- ^ Atherton, Kelsey D. (27 June 2017). "Here come the helicopters with weaponized lasers". Popular Science. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
- ^ Symonds, Tom (8 April 2009). "Police fight back on laser threat". BBC News. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
- ^ a b Luis Martinez (9 April 2013). "Navy's New Laser Weapon Blasts Bad Guys From Air, Sea". ABC. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
- ^ "The U.S. Army Plans to Field the Most Powerful Laser Weapon Yet". 7 August 2019.
- ^ "When it comes to missile-killing lasers, the US Navy is ready to burn its ships". 28 May 2019.
- ^ a b c d "Indian Army uses new DRDO laser to neutralise Chinese drone near LoC". The Economic Times. 13 April 2025. ISSN 0013-0389. Retrieved 13 April 2025.
- ^ ""Light Warfare"; by Matthew Swibel; 04.23.07;". Forbes.com. Archived from the original on 31 March 2008. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
- ^ "RAFAEL at Singapore Air Show 2014" (archived version)
- ^ a b c Williams, Dan (19 January 2014). "Israel plans laser interceptor 'Iron Beam' for short-range rockets". JERUSALEM: Reuters. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
- ^ Israeli company to unveil laser defense | UTSanDiego.com
- ^ Eshel, Tamir (19 January 2014). "RAFAEL Develops a New High Energy Laser Weapon - Defense Update:".
- ^ "Israel's Rafael to Unveil Laser-based Defense System - Haaretz Com".
- ^ Episkopos, Mark (8 September 2020). "The "Iron Beam": Israel's Anti-Missile Laser". The National Interest.
- ^ Confino, Jotam; Walters, Louisa (18 January 2024). "Tomorrow's battlefield: AI, robotic dogs, and drone helicopters". Jewish News.
- ^ Mehta, Aaron (4 October 2022). "Iron Beam, Israel's laser air defense system, could be ready in 2-3 years". Breaking Defense.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Lasers against drones". Retrieved 6 October 2021.
- ^ Dylan Malyasov (13 April 2025). "Ukraine showcases Tryzub laser weapon". Defence Blog. Retrieved 14 April 2025.
- ^ Taras Safronov. "Ukraine Develops SlimBeam Compact Laser Turret". militarnyi. Retrieved 17 May 2025.
- ^ Mark Harris (27 May 2009). "US cops and military to get laser guns". Techradar.com. Retrieved 28 July 2010.
- ^ Chris Matyszczyk (23 July 2010). "Police to experiment with blinding 'Dazer Laser'?". CNET.com. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 28 July 2010.
- ^ Eva D. Blaylock (Air Force Research Laboratory Directed Energy Directorate Public Affairs). New technology 'dazzles' aggressors, The Official Website of the U.S. Air Force, Posted 2 November 2005
- ^ "United Nations Office at Geneva". www.unog.ch. Retrieved 15 January 2009.
- ^ PERSONNEL HALTING and STIMULATION RESPONSE (PHaSR) Fact Sheet, Air Force Research Laboratory, Office of Public Affairs, April 2006; Archived
- ^ "Chinese Soldiers Have Laser Guns". 18 March 2019.
- ^ a b c Navy to Field High-Energy Laser Weapon, Laser Dazzler on Ships This Year as Development Continues, USNI News, Megan Eckstein, 30 May 2019
- ^ a b c d "Russian spy ship breaches allied waters, fires lasers at military planes". Newsweek. 19 November 2025. Retrieved 19 November 2025.
- ^ a b c d Allison, George (19 November 2025). "Russia warned as ship sits off Scotland and targets aircraft". Retrieved 19 November 2025.
- ^ "Laser voor defensie". 24 April 2018.
- ^ "Laser Technology". Northrop Grumman. Archived from the original on 27 September 2019. Retrieved 27 September 2019.
- ^ "Lockheed Martin Receives $150 Million Contract To Deliver Integrated High Energy Laser Weapon Systems To U.S. Navy". Lockheed Martin. Retrieved 27 September 2019.
- ^ "DIRECTED ENERGY". Boeing. Retrieved 27 September 2019.
- ^ "Rheinmetall and MBDA to develop high-energy laser effector system for the German Navy". Rheinmetall Defence. 8 August 2019. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
- ^ Waldman, Harry (1988). The Dictionary of SDI. New York: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 58, 157–158. ISBN 0842022953.
- ^ F. J. Duarte, W. E. Davenport, J. J. Ehrlich, and T. S. Taylor, Ruggedized narrow-linewidth dispersive dye laser oscillator, Opt. Commun. 84, 310–316 (1991).
- ^ Peter, Pae (19 March 2009). "Northrop Advance Brings Era of the Laser Gun Closer". Los Angeles Times. p. B2.
- ^ "Missile Defense Umbrella?". Center for Strategic and International Studies. Archived from the original on 11 January 2011.
- ^ "Schwartz: Get those AF boots off the ground". airforcetimes.com.
- ^ Hodge, Nathan (11 February 2011). "Pentagon Loses War To Zap Airborne Laser From Budget". Wall Street Journal.
- ^ Butler, Amy (21 December 2011). "Lights Out for the Airborne Laser". Aviation Week.
- ^ Emery, Daniel (19 July 2010). "BBC News – Anti-aircraft laser unveiled at Farnborough Airshow". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
- ^ Emery, Daniel (19 July 2010). "BBC News – Anti-aircraft laser unveiled at Farnborough Airshow". Bbc.co.uk. Archived from the original on 12 October 2011. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
- ^ Navy tests laser gun by zapping motorboat off California coast, LA Times, 4/11/11.
- ^ Northrop Grumman (7 April 2010). "Navy Shows Off Powerful New Laser Weapon". Foxnews.com. Archived from the original on 8 August 2011. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
- ^ Ackerman, Spencer (8 April 2011). "Video: Navy Laser Sets Ship on Fire". Wired. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
- ^ Air Force Link News story on the PHaSR handheld rifle-style weapon. 2 November 2005.
- ^ Markoff, John (20 February 2005). "U.S. and Israel Are Said to Talk of a Shield Against Iranian Missiles". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
- ^ Beriev A-60, GlobalSecurity.org
- ^ U.S. Army's vehicle-mounted High Energy Laser Mobile Demonstrator shoots down UAVs, mortar rounds – Laserfocusworld.com, 13 December 2013
- ^ Lockheed Martin Wins Contract To Develop Weapons Grade Fiber Laser For U.S. Army Field Test – Providencejournal.com, 24 April 2014
- ^ Gregg, Aaron (16 March 2017). "Army to get laser that can zap drones". washingtonpost.com. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
- ^ "US Army gets world record-setting 60-kW laser". 8 August 2017.
- ^ "Jefferson Lab FEL". Archived from the original on 16 October 2006. Retrieved 8 June 2009.
- ^ Whitney, Roy; Douglas, David; Neil, George (2005). Wood, Gary L (ed.). "Airborne megawatt class free-electron laser for defense and security". Laser Source and System Technology for Defense and Security. 5792: 109. Bibcode:2005SPIE.5792..109W. doi:10.1117/12.603906. OSTI 841301. S2CID 111883401.
- ^ "Raytheon Awarded Contract for Office of Naval Research's Free Electron Laser Program". Archived from the original on 11 February 2009. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
- ^ "Boeing Completes Preliminary Design of Free Electron Laser Weapon System". Retrieved 29 March 2010.
- ^ "Breakthrough Laser Could Revolutionize Navy's Weaponry". Fox News. 20 January 2011. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) - ^ "The Leading Mil Net Site on the Net". milnet.com. Archived from the original on 22 August 2014. Retrieved 12 June 2012.
- ^ "Home – Veterans Disability Guide". www.milnet.com. Archived from the original on 22 August 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
- ^ "Dazzle gun will protect US helicopters".
- ^ "U.S. Army demonstrates MEHEL 2.0 laser weapon integrated on Stryker 8x8 armoured vehicle 11803171 | March 2017 Global Defense Security news industry | Defense Security global news industry army 2017 | Archive News year".
- ^ "Army demonstrates integration of laser weapon on combat vehicle". 17 March 2017.
- ^ "Media – Lockheed Martin – Releases".
- ^ U.S. Military Laser Weapon Programs Are Facing A Reality Check. The War Zone. 21 May 2024.
- ^ "IDEX 2017: Poly reveals Silent Hunter fibre-optic laser system | IHS Jane's 360". Archived from the original on 22 April 2017. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
- ^ "Drones, lasers, and tanks: China shows off its latest weapons". Popular Science. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
- ^ Richard D. Fisher, Jr. (23 February 2017). "China's Progress with Directed Energy Weapons" (PDF). p. 8.
A Poly video showed this laser could 'ablate' or penetrate five 2 millimeter steel plates at a range of 800 meters, and an official stated it could penetrate 5 millimeters of steel at 1,000 meters.
- ^ "Начальник Генерального штаба Вооруженных Сил Российской Федерации генерал армии Валерий Герасимов встретился с представителями военно-дипломатического корпуса, аккредитованными в России" (in Russian). 18 December 2019. Retrieved 18 December 2019.
- ^ Raytheon Company (26 January 2018). "Raytheon CUAS Laser Dune Buggy vs. Drone". YouTube. Archived from the original on 22 December 2021. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
- ^ bio, See full. "China's new laser-powered rifle can literally set you on fire". CNET.
- ^ "Joint High Power Solid-State Laser, Northrop Grumman Corporation, 2012". northropgrumman.com. Retrieved 27 December 2012.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) - ^ Pae, Peter, "Northrop Advance Brings Era Of The Laser Gun Closer", Los Angeles Times, 19 March 2009., p. B2.
- ^ "ATHENA Laser Weapon System Prototype". Lockheed Martin. Archived from the original on 1 December 2012. Retrieved 30 November 2012.
- ^ "Releases". lockheedmartin.com. Archived from the original on 1 December 2012. Retrieved 30 November 2012.
- ^ Carlo, Kopp (12 May 2008). "Russian / Soviet Point Defence Weapons". ausairpower.net: 1. Archived from the original on 15 July 2008. Retrieved 31 October 2013.
- ^ DAILY SABAH WITH AA (30 September 2019). "Turkey's laser weapon ARMOL passes acceptance tests". Daily Sabah. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
- ^ "The U.S. Is Losing the Hypersonic Arms Race to China—But itItsew High-Powered Lasers are Changing the Game". 13 January 2023.
- ^ "French Navy tests HELMA-P Laser Weapon from Horizon Destroyer". 20 June 2023.
- ^ a b c Gurung, Shaurya Karanbir (14 July 2018). "India gets a step closer to laser weaponry as DRDO successfully tests laser system". The Economic Times. ISSN 0013-0389. Retrieved 13 April 2025.
- ^ "Army to acquire 9 more Laser-based counter-drone systems for deployment along Pakistan, China borders". The Economic Times. 18 April 2025. ISSN 0013-0389. Retrieved 28 April 2025.
- ^ "Indian Army, IAF to induct 16 laser based anti drone systems with 2 km range". ANI News. Retrieved 17 November 2025.
- ^ "Boost for counter-drone warfare: Army, IAF to deploy new indigenous systems; DRDO readies next-gen weapons". The Times of India. 16 November 2025. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 17 November 2025.
- ^ Philip, Snehesh Alex (13 April 2025). "'Star Wars tech': DRDO showcases 30 KW laser-based weapon to take down helicopters, swarm drones". ThePrint. Retrieved 14 April 2025.
- ^ "Laser power moves a step closer for UK defence".
- ^ "UK naval laser programme: Light at the end of the tunnel?".
- ^ "USS Portland conducts Laser Weapon System Demonstrator Test". Commander, US Pacific Fleet. 22 May 2020.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) - ^ "Israel successfully tests new laser missile defense system". Global Defense Insight. 15 April 2022. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- ^ Ben Caspit. (15 April 2022). "Israel tests innovative, high-powered laser defense system". Al-Monitor website Retrieved 17 April 2022.
- ^ Hana Levi Julian (11 August 2020). "Israel Deploys 'Light Saber' Anti-Balloon Laser to Shoot Down Threats from Gaza". Jewish Press.
- ^ "DEFEA 2023 - SR-42 star-wars C-UAS system exhibited by Soukos Robots". 18 May 2023.
- ^ LAMBROS ZACHARIS (14 July 2021). "The Greek laser weapon that hits drones every 2–3 seconds". Greek City Times.
- ^ "South Korea commissions Cheongwang high-energy laser for military use". 11 October 2024.
- ^ "Republic of Korea to Field Counter-drone Laser". 15 July 2024.
- ^ "Breaking News: Japan's Groundbreaking 10kW High-Power Laser Weapon Truck Enters Service with Japanese Army". 10 November 2024.
- ^ "Now Arriving: High-Power Laser Competition". July 2022.
- ^ Hecht, Jeff (27 September 2017). "Laser Weapons Not Yet Ready for Missile Defense". IEEE Spectrum. IEEE. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
- ^ Ghoshroy, Subrata (18 May 2015). "Navy's new laser weapon: Hype or reality?". Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
- ^ Thompson, Loren (19 December 2011). "How To Waste $100 Billion: Weapons That Didn't Work Out". forbes.com. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
- ^ "Atomic Rocket: Space War: Weapons". Archived from the original on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 27 September 2019.
- ^ "The Swiss army knife of smoke screens".
- ^ US lasers? PLA preparing to raise its deflector shields – SCMP.com, 10 March 2014
- ^ Hambling, David (4 November 2016). "Drones Fight Back Against Laser Weapons". popsci.com. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
- ^ United States Office of Technological Assessment (1986). Strategic Defenses: Two Reports by the Office of Technology Assessment. Office of Technological Assessment. p. 172 ss. ISBN 9780691639192.
- ^ "Science fiction inspires DARPA weapon". 22 April 2008. Retrieved 15 February 2008.
- ^ Van Riper, A. Bowdoin (2002). Science in popular culture: a reference guide. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 45. ISBN 0-313-31822-0.
Laser weapon
View on GrokipediaHistory of Development
Early Concepts and Theoretical Foundations
The theoretical underpinnings of laser weapons derive from Albert Einstein's 1917 formulation of stimulated emission, in which an incoming photon induces an excited atom to release an identical photon, enabling amplification of coherent electromagnetic radiation.[11] This process, distinct from spontaneous emission, provided the quantum mechanical basis for population inversion in optical media, a prerequisite for lasing action.[12] Building on this, Charles Townes and Arthur Schawlow proposed the optical maser—later termed laser—in a 1958 paper, theorizing that stimulated emission in a resonant cavity could generate a directed, high-intensity beam suitable for applications requiring precise energy deposition.[13] The first operational laser, a ruby device constructed by Theodore Maiman, demonstrated this principle on May 16, 1960, producing a pulsed output of approximately 1 megawatt peak power in a collimated red beam.[14] Military theorists quickly recognized the weapon potential of such devices, conceptualizing them as directed-energy systems capable of delivering thermal effects at light speed to vaporize or deform targets via rapid localized heating exceeding material melting points.[15] Initial models posited that laser irradiance above 10 kW/cm² could induce ablation through photon absorption, leading to molecular bond rupture, plasma ignition, and mechanical shock waves—effects scalable with wavelength, pulse duration, and atmospheric transmission. For instance, infrared wavelengths (e.g., 10.6 μm CO₂ lasers) were favored early for efficient energy coupling to metals and composites, though ultraviolet options were explored for reduced diffraction and atmospheric scattering.[16] These foundations emphasized causal realism in beam-target interactions: energy deposition follows Beer-Lambert absorption laws, with destructive thresholds determined empirically by fluence (J/cm²) rather than speculative narratives.[17] By 1962, U.S. Department of Defense analyses outlined laser weapon architectures for anti-aircraft and missile defense, projecting requirements for continuous-wave outputs in the megawatt range to counter relativistic target velocities and achieve dwell times under 1 second for hard-kill effects.[18] Theoretical challenges included beam quality degradation from thermal blooming—nonlinear atmospheric self-focusing due to index-of-refraction gradients—and the need for adaptive optics to mitigate turbulence-induced phase aberrations, as quantified by the Fried parameter for coherence length.[19] Early simulations, grounded in Maxwell's equations for electromagnetic propagation, underscored that vacuum performance vastly exceeded real-world efficacy, necessitating trade-offs in power efficiency (initially <1% for solid-state lasers) against cooling demands to prevent medium degradation.[20] These concepts privileged empirical validation over optimism, revealing lasers' advantages in precision and scalability but highlighting fundamental limits like diffraction-limited spot size scaling with wavelength and aperture diameter.Cold War-Era Programs and Prototypes
In the United States, laser weapon research accelerated in the 1970s with the development of chemical lasers for directed energy applications. The Baseline Demonstration Laser (BDL), a hydrogen fluoride (HF) chemical laser produced by TRW Inc. for the Department of Defense, achieved operation in 1973 as the world's first high-energy chemical laser prototype.[15] This was followed by the Navy-ARPA Chemical Laser (NACL), an HF system that integrated with a Navy pointer tracker and demonstrated 250 kW output during tests from 1975 to 1978, marking the first integrated high-energy laser system for naval applications.[15] The Mid-Infrared Advanced Chemical Laser (MIRACL), a deuterium fluoride (DF) system, emerged in the mid-1980s as a megawatt-class continuous-wave prototype. Integrated with the Sea Lite Beam Director at White Sands Missile Range, MIRACL successfully engaged dynamic targets including BQM-34 drones, Vandal supersonic missiles, and high-altitude objects, validating its potential for air and missile defense.[15] Concurrently, the Airborne Laser Laboratory (ALL), housed in a modified KC-135 aircraft operational from 1977, tested gas-dynamic lasers up to 400 kW against aerial targets, pioneering airborne directed-energy concepts despite challenges with beam control and atmospheric effects.[21] Soviet laser programs, assessed by U.S. intelligence as high-priority with investments surpassing American efforts, focused on anti-satellite (ASAT) and air defense roles from the 1960s onward. Facilities like Sary Shagan hosted prototypes capable of sensor jamming at low Earth orbits by the late 1970s, with the Terra-3 system demonstrating tracking and potential dazzling of U.S. reconnaissance satellites, including a 1984 incident affecting the Space Shuttle Challenger's optics.[22] U.S. estimates projected Soviet ground-based lasers achieving sensor kills at altitudes up to 800 km within a year of 1978 assessments and prototype air defense systems by the early 1980s.[22] Key Soviet prototypes included the Beriev A-60, an Il-76-based airborne platform that conducted laser tests starting with its first flight in 1981, evaluating beam propagation for anti-aircraft applications. The Polyus (Skif-DM) spacecraft, launched unsuccessfully on May 15, 1987, via Zenit rocket, incorporated a one-megawatt carbon-dioxide laser intended for ASAT operations against low-Earth orbit threats, representing an ambitious space-based prototype amid responses to U.S. Strategic Defense Initiative proposals.[23] These efforts highlighted parallel technological pursuits but were constrained by reliability issues, pointing inaccuracies, and the era's computational limits, with no verified combat deployments achieved before the Cold War's end.[22]Modern Advancements and Maturation (2000s–2025)
In the early 2000s, joint US-Israeli efforts advanced prototype testing with the Tactical High Energy Laser (THEL), a deuterium fluoride chemical laser that successfully intercepted a short-range Katyusha rocket on June 6, 2000, during live-fire trials at White Sands Missile Range.[24] Subsequent tests demonstrated THEL's effectiveness against mortar rounds, including salvos simulating real threats, though the program shifted focus due to chemical laser inefficiencies and pursuit of mobile variants like the Mobile Tactical High Energy Laser (MTHEL). Concurrently, the US Missile Defense Agency developed the Boeing YAL-1 Airborne Laser, modifying a Boeing 747-400F with a megawatt-class chemical oxygen iodine laser; milestones included the first in-flight firing of its illumination and tracking lasers in 2007, followed by destruction of ballistic missile surrogates in January and February 2010.[25] The YAL-1 program ended in 2012 amid challenges with beam control at range, logistical demands, and high costs, redirecting emphasis toward solid-state lasers for greater scalability and reduced operational complexity.[26] The 2010s marked a pivot to solid-state technologies, enabling compact, electrically driven systems less reliant on hazardous chemicals. The US Navy's Laser Weapon System (LaWS), a 30-kilowatt fiber laser, achieved initial deployment aboard the USS Ponce in August 2014, with operational authorization by December 2014 as the first Department of Defense laser approved for fleet use against small surface threats and drones, at an engagement cost of approximately $1 per shot.[27] This maturation reflected improvements in beam quality, power efficiency, and integration with existing sensors, though early systems faced limitations in adverse weather and required short dwell times for effect.[28] Parallel Army programs tested high-energy lasers against unmanned aerial vehicles and mortars, laying groundwork for counter-unmanned aircraft system (C-UAS) roles. By the 2020s, laser systems scaled to higher powers and platform integrations, with the US Navy's High Energy Laser with Integrated Optical-dazzler and Surveillance (HELIOS), a 60-kilowatt-class system upgradable to 150 kilowatts, successfully engaging an aerial drone target during fiscal year 2024 tests aboard a destroyer, demonstrating extended range up to 8 kilometers.[29] The US Army deployed prototype directed-energy weapons for C-UAS overseas in 2024, with plans for 300-kilowatt systems by 2025 to counter missiles and drones, amid reports of at least 22 US operational or advanced-test lasers by mid-2025.[30] Internationally, Israel's Iron Beam, a 100-kilowatt ground-based laser, completed final trials in September 2025 and entered operational service in the fourth quarter, achieving first documented combat interceptions of Hezbollah drones earlier that year.[31] China publicly unveiled the LY-1 directed-energy system in September 2025, while Russia deployed Chinese-origin lasers against Ukrainian drones, signaling broader proliferation among at least 18 nations by October 2025.[32] These developments underscore maturation toward reliable, cost-effective defenses against low-end threats, driven by advances in diode-pumped fiber lasers and adaptive optics to mitigate atmospheric attenuation.[33] Modern U.S. Department of Defense HEL programs integrate cybersecurity hardening as a core requirement, adhering to frameworks such as CMMC, DFARS 252.204-7012, and DoD Instruction 8530.01. This ensures protection of fire-control software, sensors, and network interfaces against cyber intrusions, which could otherwise compromise directed-energy weapon performance in contested environments.Fundamental Physics and Operation
Core Principles of Laser Directed Energy
High-energy laser directed energy weapons function by emitting a collimated beam of coherent electromagnetic radiation, typically in the infrared spectrum, to deposit thermal energy onto a target with precision. The underlying physics relies on stimulated emission, a process first theorized by Albert Einstein in 1917, where excited atoms or molecules in a gain medium release photons in phase with an incident photon, amplifying light intensity while maintaining spatial and temporal coherence.[34] This coherence minimizes beam divergence, enabling the laser to maintain a small spot size over distance—often diffraction-limited—and achieve irradiance levels exceeding 1 kW/cm², sufficient to ignite, melt, or ablate materials like metals or composites.[1] Systems require a power source to pump the gain medium (e.g., solid-state crystals, fibers, or gases) to population inversion, followed by optical amplification and beam directing via mirrors or lenses.[35] Beam propagation occurs at the speed of light (approximately 3 × 10^8 m/s in vacuum), providing near-instantaneous energy delivery without projectile mass or recoil, contrasting with kinetic weapons that follow Newtonian trajectories.[1] In practice, high-energy lasers (HELs) output at least 1 kW, scalable to tens or hundreds of kilowatts for tactical effects, with continuous-wave modes sustaining dwell time for cumulative heating or pulsed modes delivering peak powers for shock or plasma induction.[1] Damage mechanisms are primarily thermal: absorbed energy raises target temperature rapidly (e.g., steel melts at ~1,500°C), leading to vaporization, structural weakening, or ignition of propellants in missiles or drones, with effects scalable by irradiance and exposure duration per the heat equation $ q = \rho c \frac{dT}{dt} + k \nabla^2 T $, where $ q $ is heat flux from the beam.[36] Non-thermal effects, such as induced plasma shielding, can occur at ultra-high intensities but typically limit rather than enhance lethality. Atmospheric propagation introduces causal challenges rooted in molecular absorption, scattering by particulates, and nonlinear effects like thermal blooming, where beam-heated air creates density gradients that defocus the wavefront.[1] Wavelength selection (e.g., 1–2 μm for fiber lasers) minimizes water vapor absorption bands, while adaptive optics correct turbulence via real-time phase conjugation, extending effective range to several kilometers under clear conditions.[3] Cooling systems are essential, as inefficient energy extraction (often <30% wall-plug efficiency) generates waste heat that must be dissipated to prevent medium degradation or system failure.[1] These principles enable scalable, magazine-depth engagements limited primarily by electrical power supply rather than expendable munitions.Energy Generation and Beam Propagation
High-energy laser weapons generate directed energy through stimulated emission in specialized gain media, requiring input power densities in the kilowatts to megawatts range for tactical effects. Early developmental systems, such as the Tactical High-Energy Laser (THEL) and Airborne Laser (ABL), employed chemical oxygen-iodine lasers (COIL), where atomic iodine is excited via energy transfer from chemically generated singlet delta oxygen, producing output at 1.315 μm wavelength with efficiencies around 30%.[37] These systems relied on reactions involving hydrogen peroxide, potassium hydroxide, and chlorine gas, yielding high pulse energies but constrained by finite chemical fuel supplies and logistical demands for hazardous materials.[38] Contemporary military laser weapons prioritize electrically driven solid-state and fiber lasers for enhanced deployability and sustainability. Diode-pumped fiber lasers, using ytterbium-doped silica fibers, convert electrical power to optical output with wall-plug efficiencies exceeding 40%, scalable to hundreds of kilowatts through coherent or spectral beam combination of multiple fiber amplifiers.[39] Examples include the U.S. Navy's HELIOS system, delivering over 150 kW from compact, all-solid-state architecture, and the U.S. Army's 50 kW-class lasers integrated on Stryker vehicles, powered by vehicle generators or batteries.[40] These electric systems avoid chemical replenishment, enabling near-infinite dwell times limited only by prime power availability, though they demand advanced thermal management to dissipate waste heat.[41] Beam propagation in laser weapons involves collimating and directing the output via precision optics, such as beam expanders and gimbal-mounted telescopes, to achieve diffraction-limited focus at ranges up to tens of kilometers. Atmospheric transmission governs effective range, with attenuation from molecular absorption (e.g., by H2O and CO2 at specific infrared bands) quantified by Beer's law, I = I0 e^{-βL}, where β incorporates absorption and scattering coefficients and L is path length.[42] For 1-2 μm wavelengths common in fiber lasers, clear-weather transmission exceeds 90% over 1 km horizontally, but aerosol Mie scattering and rain reduce this significantly.[43] Turbulence induces wavefront distortions via refractive index fluctuations, causing beam wander, spread, and scintillation, while thermal blooming—nonlinear self-focusing from beam-heated air parcels—further degrades irradiance at high fluences above 10 kW/cm².[44] Adaptive optics mitigate these via real-time wavefront sensing (e.g., Shack-Hartmann sensors) and correction with deformable mirrors, restoring Strehl ratios above 0.5 for on-target intensities sufficient for hard-kill effects.[45] Systems like those in HELIOS incorporate fast beam control loops operating at kilohertz rates, compensating for platform motion and aero-optical effects in naval or airborne applications.[46] Propagation modeling integrates these factors, predicting engagement envelopes under varying visibility and elevation angles to optimize wavelength and power scaling.[1]Classification of Laser Weapons
Continuous-Wave High-Energy Lasers
Continuous-wave high-energy lasers (CW HEL) in directed energy weapons emit a steady stream of coherent photons, sustaining power output to achieve thermal damage through prolonged beam dwell on targets, such as igniting fuels or melting structural components. These systems differ from pulsed lasers by prioritizing average power over peak intensity, enabling effects like material ablation via heating rates that exceed target dissipation capabilities, typically requiring 10-100 kW for practical engagement ranges against drones or missiles.[1][47] Solid-state configurations, dominant in modern CW HEL, leverage fiber or slab amplifiers for beam combining, achieving efficiencies above 30% while minimizing size and weight for platform integration.[48] The U.S. Navy's AN/SEQ-3 Laser Weapon System (LaWS), operational on USS Ponce from 2014 to 2017, exemplified early CW HEL deployment with a 33 kW output derived from six commercial fiber lasers, demonstrating intercepts of small unmanned aerial vehicles and speedboats at ranges up to 1 mile using shipboard power without expendable munitions.[6] LaWS highlighted CW advantages in cost-per-shot, estimated at under $1, contrasting kinetic interceptors costing thousands.[1] Advancing from LaWS, the High Energy Laser with Integrated Optical-dazzler and Surveillance (HELIOS) system, a 60 kW-class CW laser scalable to 150 kW, was delivered by Lockheed Martin for installation on Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, including USS Preble.[49] In fiscal year 2024 tests, HELIOS successfully neutralized an airborne drone target, validating continuous-wave lethality against dynamic threats while incorporating surveillance for target acquisition.[29] Lockheed Martin's progression in CW technology included a 300 kW demonstrator delivered to the U.S. military in 2022, emphasizing reduced size, weight, and power demands through efficient beam scaling, with plans for 500 kW systems to extend effective ranges against hardened targets like cruise missiles.[50][51] The U.S. Army targeted 50 kW CW lasers for Stryker vehicles by the mid-2020s, focusing on counter-unmanned aerial system roles, though integration delays persist due to thermal management and atmospheric propagation challenges.[52] CW HEL systems face limitations from beam quality degradation in adverse weather and the need for precise tracking to maintain dwell times of seconds, yet their speed-of-light delivery and low collateral risk position them as force multipliers for layered defense architectures.[53] Ongoing solid-state innovations, including diode-pumped amplifiers, continue to enhance output stability and ruggedness for operational environments.[39]Pulsed and Specialized Laser Systems
Pulsed laser weapons deliver energy in discrete, high-intensity bursts rather than a continuous stream, achieving peak powers that can exceed average output by factors of thousands or more. This enables effects such as rapid surface ablation, plasma channel formation, and mechanical disruption of targets, often with less collateral thermal damage than continuous-wave systems.[54] [55] In atmospheric propagation, pulsed operation reduces thermal blooming—a defocusing effect from beam-heated air—since pulse durations (typically nanoseconds to femtoseconds) are shorter than the time required for significant air ionization or refractive index changes.[48] [56] The Pulsed Energy Projectile (PEP) exemplifies an early specialized pulsed system, designed for non-lethal counter-personnel effects by firing a 1-microsecond infrared laser pulse (at around 1.06 micrometers wavelength) to ablate a thin layer of target material, creating an expanding plasma that generates a supersonic shockwave, bright flash, and loud report for incapacitation up to 10 meters. Developed under U.S. Marine Corps and Navy programs starting in the early 2000s, PEP underwent field testing but faced technical limitations in consistently producing the required pressure waveform for reliable bio-effects, leading to program reassessment by 2008.[57] [58] Ultrashort pulsed lasers (USPLs), a advanced specialized variant with pulse durations under 1 picosecond and peak powers reaching 1-5 terawatts, leverage filamentation—self-guided plasma channels—to propagate through turbulence and deliver precise, high-fluence energy for hard-kill effects against missiles, drones, or optics. The U.S. Army's 2025 initiatives target tactical USPL prototypes for air defense, emphasizing scalable systems with terawatt-class output to enable deep penetration and minimal blooming.[52] [59] The Office of Naval Research supports USPL development for maritime applications, funding subsystems for high-peak-power optics and atmospheric compensation to suit shipboard directed energy weapons.[60] As of 2025, private firms like Applied Energetics hold contracts for prototype USPL units, with fieldable systems projected for testing against drone threats.[61] These efforts prioritize solid-state architectures for compactness and efficiency over legacy gas or chemical lasers.[56]Military Applications by Platform
Ground-Based Systems for Air and Missile Defense
Ground-based laser systems for air and missile defense employ high-energy lasers mounted on stationary or mobile platforms to engage aerial threats including drones, rockets, mortars, and short-range missiles. These weapons deliver concentrated energy to heat and destroy targets, providing a cost-effective alternative to kinetic interceptors with engagements costing fractions of a dollar in electricity.[39] The U.S. Army's Directed Energy Maneuver-Short Range Air Defense (DE M-SHORAD) integrates a 50-kilowatt-class high-energy laser onto Stryker combat vehicles for mobile counter-unmanned aerial system (C-UAS) and short-range air defense capabilities. Prototypes were deployed overseas in February 2024 for operational evaluation, with field tests in June 2025 at Fort Sill confirming integration with kinetic systems like the Maneuver Short-Range Air Defense rather than full replacement.[62][63] The system acquires, tracks, and defeats threats using Raytheon-developed laser technology, marking the Army's initial operational deployment of a vehicle-mounted high-energy laser.[39][64] Israel's Iron Beam, produced by Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, is a 100-kilowatt-class high-energy laser weapon system designed to intercept short-range rockets, artillery, mortars, and drones within its multi-layered air defense architecture. Development concluded in September 2025, enabling production and delivery of initial units to the Israel Defense Forces by year's end for integration alongside systems like Iron Dome.[65] Variants such as Iron Beam-M and Lite Beam have achieved operational status, with deployments in active scenarios demonstrating real-world utility against low-cost threats.[66] The system's precision and minimal debris generation suit urban environments, enhancing affordability for high-volume intercepts.[67] Earlier joint U.S.-Israel efforts under the Tactical High Energy Laser (THEL) program tested a deuterium fluoride chemical laser prototype against Katyusha rockets in 2004 and 2005, achieving successful intercepts but facing cancellation around 2006 due to size, logistics, and advancements in solid-state laser technology.[68] Modern systems like DE M-SHORAD and Iron Beam leverage compact solid-state lasers, addressing prior limitations in mobility and power efficiency for tactical applications.U.S. Army High Energy Laser Programs
The U.S. Army has advanced several high-energy laser (HEL) initiatives focused primarily on counter-unmanned aerial systems (C-UAS) and short-range air defense. The Enduring High Energy Laser (E-HEL) program, initiated in 2025, represents the Army's first formal program of record for a family of high-energy lasers. Managed by the Rapid Capabilities and Critical Technologies Office (RCCTO), E-HEL seeks to acquire up to 20 modular open systems approach platforms for protecting semi-fixed and maneuver forces against Group 1-3 drones and one-way attack UAS. A request for information was issued in October 2025, with competitive source selection anticipated in fiscal year 2026.[69][70] Related efforts include:- Army Multi-Purpose High Energy Laser (AMP-HEL): Prototyping mobile C-UAS systems, with deliveries of 20 kW-class prototypes integrated on vehicles like the Infantry Squad Vehicle.
- Palletized High Energy Laser (P-HEL): Deployed overseas since 2022 for operational testing against small UAS threats, with sustainment contracts awarded.
- Indirect Fire Protection Capability-High Energy Laser (IFPC-HEL): 300 kW-class prototypes developed for countering rockets, artillery, mortars, and drones, with testing ongoing as of 2026, though the program did not transition to a formal program of record and was reduced in scope.[71]