A Poor Man's Golden Dome
Briefly

A Poor Man's Golden Dome
"If you've never seen a laser shoot an aircraft out of the sky, the experience can be unsettling. The weapon fits comfortably into the trunk of a car. It makes no noise and emits no light, not even the glowing red beam that's so familiar from the movies. When a team of Ukrainian soldiers and engineers took me to see their prototype the other day, it seemed easy to use. Almost too easy."
"The operator set up the laser cannon on the roof of his pickup truck in the middle of an empty field. It resembles a hobbyist's telescope with some cameras affixed to the sides. For target practice, one of the engineers launched a small drone, and it flew a few hundred yards away from us, hovering in the gauzy winter sky. The laser swiveled as its cameras followed the target."
A portable laser weapon called Sunray enables silent, invisible strikes and can fit in a car trunk. The system was demonstrated from the roof of a pickup truck and used cameras to track a drone a few hundred yards away before burning it within seconds. The U.S. Navy operates a combat laser called Helios developed by Lockheed Martin and installed on a destroyer. Sunray builders completed their system in roughly two years at a cost of a few million dollars and plan to sell units for a few hundred thousand dollars. Commander Pavlo Yelizarov attributes rapid development to survival urgency rather than profit motives.
Read at The Atlantic
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