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India Develops Anti-Missile Direct Energy Weapons

As per my information, DRDO has actually developed a prototype ground-based fixed site, green laser interceptor DEWS (Directed Energy Weapon System). India now needs to test the system on actual field and the computer simulations so far have shown promising results. They are getting some classified help from the Israeli's who themselves are already at an advanced stage of this project having built a mobile unit for remote deployment of their DEWS.

Hope this answers your query! Otherwise call up DRDO hotline and ask them? :cheers:


can you please share your information by providing some resources. we would really love to see it on the papers..thanks
 
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Please do not confuse my 'interesting' remark with any confidence in DRDO capabilities. Indian DEW program is essentially an off-shoot of the Israeli ground-based energy weapon system that is currently in advance testing and has already shot down a few Palestinian launched rockets from Gaza etc.

My 'interesting' stems from another 'classified' fact related to the subject matter and in a very advance stage of testing elsewhere!! But that is a story for another thread at another time.

Meanwhile, I am anxious to see how and really 'IF' the Indians really follow this up or rather dwell on their laurels to have advertised this ability openly on the global forum.

dude i think there is a thread about khali and durga which is endrgy weapons system developed by DRDO and it is a indigenous and not from any foreign country's.......... if india develops any weapon it is a Israeli tech............... waaaaw what a hegemonic attitude............:hitwall::hitwall::hitwall:
 
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dude i think there is a thread about khali and durga which is endrgy weapons system developed by DRDO and it is a indigenous and not from any foreign country's.......... if india develops any weapon it is a Israeli tech............... waaaaw what a hegemonic attitude............:hitwall::hitwall::hitwall:




Its KALI - Kilo Ampere Linear Injector ..... is a linear electron
accelerator being developed in India, by the Defence Research Development Organization (DRDO) and the Bhabha Atomic Research
Centre
 
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I have been hearing this news from long time. when you build it, make news out of it. till than shut up. no wonder, why some are called big mouths.

Of course India is making progress. I understand that you have heard of India progress for a while. But with DRDO, its all about perpetual progress. The purpose is not to create an actual weapon but to enhance the morals of Indian politician, scientists and fans in this forum.
 
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dude i think there is a thread about khali and durga which is endrgy weapons system developed by DRDO and it is a indigenous and not from any foreign country's.......... if india develops any weapon it is a Israeli tech............... waaaaw what a hegemonic attitude............:hitwall::hitwall::hitwall:

Bro, he is talking about LASER weapons and not about pulsed electron beam weapons like KALI and DURGA.
LASER based weapons work by burning a hole or heating up the body of its target. Electron beam weapons fry the electric circuits of the target. Former can be called as hard kill and the latter as soft kill.
 
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The system is probable out of the drawing board and they have started working on it.

The anti missile DEW will take at least a decade to materialise. Check out this report

NEW DELHI: Move aside Darth Vader and Luke Skywalker, DRDO is trying to develop its own set of Star Wars-like weapons. From laser dazzlers to control rioting crowds to high-powered lasers to destroy incoming missiles, DRDO is working on a slew of directed energy weapons (DEWs).

"Lasers are weapons of the future. We can, for instance, use laser beams to shoot down an enemy missile in its boost or terminal phase,'' said DRDO's Laser Science & Technology Centre (LASTEC) director Anil Kumar Maini, talking to TOI on Monday.

Incidentally, DRDO chief V K Saraswat himself has identified DEWs, along with space security, cyber-security and hypersonic vehicles, as focus areas in the years ahead. "LASTEC has the mandate to develop DEWs for armed forces,'' said DRDO's chief controller (electronics & computer sciences) R Sreehari Rao.

While conventional weapons use kinetic or chemical energy of missiles or other projectiles to destroy targets, DEWs decimate them by bombarding with subatomic particles or electromagnetic waves at the speed of sound. Apart from the speed-of-light delivery, laser DEWs cause minimal collateral damage.

DRDO, of course, often promises much more than it can deliver. But even the defence ministry's recent "technology perspective and capability roadmap'' identifies DEWs and ASAT (anti-satellite) weapons as thrust areas over the next 15 years, as was first reported by TOI.

The aim is to develop laser-based weapons, deployed on airborne as well as seaborne platforms, which can intercept missiles soon after they are launched towards India in the boost phase itself. These will be part of the fledgling ballistic missile defence system being currently developed by DRDO.

The US, incidentally, is already conducting tests of high-powered laser weapons on a modified 747 jumbo jet, the ALTB (airborne laser testbed), which direct lethal amounts of directed energy to destroy ballistic missiles during their boost phase.

It will, of course, take India several years to even conduct such tests. For now, LASTEC is developing "a 25-kilowatt'' laser system to hit a missile during its terminal phase at a distance of 5-7 km. "All you need is to heat the missile skin to 200-300 degree and the warhead inside will detonate,'' said Maini.

LASTEC is also working on a vehicle-mounted "gas dynamic laser-based DEW system'', under project Aditya, which should be ready in three years. "But Aditya is just a technology demonstrator to prove beam control technology. Ultimately, we have to develop solid-state lasers,'' said Maini.

Even countries like US have now shifted their focus to the more efficient, smaller and lighter solid-state laser DEWs since chemical (dye and gas) lasers are dogged by size, weight and logistical problems.

LASER POWER

Non-Lethal systems:

-- Hand-held laser dazzler to disorient adversaries, without collateral damage. 50-metre range. Status: Ready.

-- Crowd-control dazzlers mounted on vehicles to dispel rioting mobs. 250-metre range. Status: take 2 years more.

-- Laser-based ordnance disposal system, which can be used to neutralise IEDs and other explosives from a distance. Status: trials begin in 18 months.


Lethal Systems:

-- Air defence dazzlers to take on enemy aircraft and helicopters. 10-km range. Status: take 2 years more .

-- 25-kilowatt laser systems to destroy missiles during their terminal phase. 5 to 7-km range. Status: take five years more .

-- At least 100-kilowatt solid-state laser systems, mounted on aircraft and ships, to destroy missiles in their boost phase itself. Status: will take a decade.

DRDO?s next: Star Wars-like weapons - India - The Times of India
 
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The Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) here is in the final
stages of assembling a powerful electron accelerating machine named
``Kali-5000'' which, its scientists say, can potentially be used as a
beam weapon.

Bursts of microwaves packed with gigawatts of power (one gigawatt is
1,000 million watts) produced by this machine, when aimed at enemy
missiles and aircraft will cripple their electronics systems and
computer chips and bring them down.

According to scientists, ``soft killing'' by high power microwaves has
advantages over the so-called laser weapon which destroys by drilling
holes through metal.

Kali-5000 will be ready for testing by the end of this year, according
to P H Ron, head of the accelerator and pulse power division at BARC and
chief designer of India's first star war weapon.

However, in the present form, India's beam weapon is too bulky - it
weighs 26 tonnes - including tanks containing 12,000 litres of oil. Mr
Ron said some ``compacting'' was possible.

He said the Kali (Kilo-ampere linear injector) machine was developed for
industrial applications and that the defence use was a recent spin off.
He, however, declined to elaborate.

Describing it as a machine ``bordering basic research'', Atomic Energy
Commission chairman Rajagopalan Chidambaram admitted in an interview
that it has military potential. ``There are some technologies we have to
be in touch with because they may become useful (later),'' he said.

The development of the Kali machine was mooted in 1985 by Mr
Chidambaram, then director of BARC, but work earnestly began in 1989.

Mr Ron said the machine essentially generated pulses of highly energetic
electrons. Other components in the machine down the line converted the
electrons into flash X-rays (for ultra high-speed photography) or
microwaves. The electron beam itself can be used for welding.

The Defence Ballistics Research Institute in Chandigarh is already using
an X-ray version of the Kali to study speed of projectiles.

Another defence institute in Bangalore is using a microwave- producing
version of the Kali, which the scientists use for testing the
vulnerability of the electronic systems going into the light combat
aircraft under development and designing electrostatic shields to
protect them from microwave attack by the enemy.

According to BARC scientists, the Kali machine has for the first time
provided India a way to ``harden'' the electronic systems used in
satellites and missiles against the deadly electromagnetic impulses
(EMI) generated by nuclear weapons.

The EMI wrecks havoc by creating intense electric field of several
thousand volts per centimetre. The electronic components currently used
in missiles can withstand fields of just 300 volts per centimetre.

While the Kali systems built so far are single shot pulse power systems
(they produce one burst of microwaves and the next burst comes much
later), the Kali-5000 is a rapid fire device, and hence its potential as
a beam weapon.

According to reports published by BARC, the machine will shoot several
thousand bursts of microwaves, each burst lasting for just 60 billionths
of a second and packed with a power of about four gigawatts.

The high-power microwave pulses travel in a straight line and do not
dissipate their energy if the frequency falls between three and 10
gigahertz.

According to BARC scientists, a microwave power of 150 megawatts has
already been demonstrated in earlier versions of Kali.(PTI)
 
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THEL-Beam-Director-Turret-2S.jpg
 
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I have a feeling alwayss that in matters of secrecy, we are a step ahead of rest fo the world, we advartize our failures more than success to keep the success closely guraded from the eveil eyes of our enemies, for them first..

to under estimate us...and then Bang on!!!!....:)

Feel free to comment.
 
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He said the Kali (Kilo-ampere linear injector) machine was developed for industrial applications and that the defence use was a recent spin off.
He, however, declined to elaborate.

some thing is cooking guys .......
 
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