DURGA 2: India's Very Own Laser Weapon Being Developed By DRDO Could Be Tested Soon

DDG-80

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Military powers who have deployed or were left behind in developing or acquiring expensive anti-missile or anti-drone systems are now engaged in a serious race to develop and deploy the next generation of laser weapon systems that can neutralise any missile or fighter aircraft or drone high in the sky or even within enemy airspace. From big powers like the United States or China to countries like Turkey, all are reported to have advanced or initiated work on the highly challenging laser weapon systems to make their skies unimpregnable. The laser laboratory of India's Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) is also reported to have been working on such highly complex laser weapon systems for the last two decades, and is now reported to have achieved a fairly advanced stage of testing a real prototype of a laser weapon that can even destroy a ballistic missile.

Though the Indian defence establishment has maintained strict silence over the programme, its progress was first discussed in the US strategic circles. Indian scientists are reported to be working hard to test the prototype of the laser weapon system in the first half of this year. For the layman, a directed energy weapon damages or destroys its target using focussed energy by means of laser, microwave or particle beams. Such a weapon system can protect vital defence infrastructure from missile or air attack.

DURGA-2: Laser Weapons That Can Be A Game-Changer

Directed energy weapons, also called laser weapons, if developed and deployed operationally, can neutralise any drone or ballistic missile attacks from the skies or even at the originating location as it can travel at the speed of the light. It can deflect the path of the missiles and can even destroy a fighter aircraft.

The present generation of anti-aircraft or anti-missile systems are not considered fool-proof but the laser weapon promises to have 100 percent kill probability. In fact, the laser weapon will prove to be a game-changer in military realm, and hence the DRDO is devoting its energy on this dream project. Some details of the laser weapon, dubbed DURGA-2 ( Directionally Unrestricted Ray Gun Array), was first revealed in the US Defence News magazine almost three years ago. Indian strategic circles are abuzz with the possibility of India deploying the laser system, which can destroy any ballistic or cruise missile launched by China or Pakistan.

The Chinese or Pakistani ballistic missiles pose greatest threat to Indian security. Though India has contracted with Russia for five S-400 anti-missile squadrons costing $5.5 billion to prevent incoming missiles from falling over Indian territory, it cannot guarantee the destruction of each and every missile directed at Indian metros. The laser weapon can also annihilate the enemy civilian or military radar and electronic warfare systems, which will render all enemy missile establishments useless.

The US defence media reported in 2021, the Laser Science and Technology Centre (LSTC) at New Delhi is working on this next generation laser defensive and offensive systems. This laboratory is developing and improving various laser generation techniques using solid state and fibre and chemical lasers for defensive fibre and chemical lasers for defensive and offensive use. The laser laboratory is the lead centre for this highly classified DURGA-2 project. The DURGA-2 Is planned to be integrated with land, sea and air based platforms.

The LSTC is reported to have succeeded in developing a 25KW laser that can target a ballistic missile during its terminal phase at a maximum distance of 5 km. The laser experts are working to enhance this range to 100 km or beyond. Earlier, in 2017, the DRDO had tested a 1 kw laser system mounted on a truck at a DRDO facility in Chitradurga, which was able to hit a target at a distance of 250 metre. The biggest challenge is to provide adequate power to the system for the high power laser weapons.

Why Laser Weapons Are Being Called The Future Of Warfare

The US military has already deployed such directed energy weapons, in the role of “drone defence system”, which uses laser beams to knock out parts of the drones that are becoming an integral part of the military arsenal of the big and small powers. The 300 kw Laser developed by Lockheed Martin is already in use and is being upscaled to 500 kw by leveraging some of the optical and technical breakthroughs made during the development of combat laser systems for the US military. According to senior Lockheed Martin official Rick Cordaro, the company is investing in production infrastructure in anticipation of huge demand from the US military. The Lockheed Martin made laser weapon systems would prove to be cheaper because of low cost per engagement, high speed of light delivery and high precision response and reduced logistics requirements.

Because of these advantages, the US defence giant is engaged in bigger laser systems and more powerful while remaining relatively portable and cost effective. According to Lockheed, the cost of deploying a conventional missile system for air threat defence would be nearly same the cost of deploying a combat laser system, but unlike the conventional missile system the cost of operating the laser would be much less, i.e., a few dollars per shot whereas a missile launch would cost around $50,000 to $150,000. Israel is already operating the new Iron Beam laser interception system, which is the world’s first energy based weapon system that uses a laser to shoot down incoming UAVs, rockets and mortars at a cost of merely $3.5 each.

Laser weapons are going to be the future of anti-missiles, anti-drones or anti-aircraft warfare, and hence there is a worldwide interest in acquiring such system. Indian strategic circle is eagerly waiting for this game-changer indigenous laser weapon that can successfully tackle any aerial threat. The laser weapon have the potentials of becoming an effective and cheaper alternative to any ballistic missile defence system like Russia' S-400 or the US' Patriot anti-missile systems.
 
This is the system that will change the entire face of warfare in Asia..... what about KALI project? Is KALI renamed as DURGA or its different types.....
 
This is the system that will change the entire face of warfare in Asia..... what about KALI project? Is KALI renamed as DURGA or its different types.....
KALI is a different system. It uses microwaves.
 
wow!!! yet another game changer from India
Who incapable of making simple assault rifles needing Russia to hold India hand and tendering for bullets as India unable to make bullets, but able to make game changers

using laser no less
WOW WEE! 25 kw laser enough for India to whip out yet another game changer title

Just as while China invited the gunpowder, but uses gunpowder to make beautiful fireworks originally

Only later turning gunpowder into bombs to fight enemies

So perhaps China will be distracted from using laser trying to rip matter from vacuum and turning their inventiveness to mundance ripping enemy planes and drones and tanks from face of Earth . A much much easier task than ripping matter from vacuum

And needing laser of much much weaker than the 100 peta watt laser China now making



Scientist announces a laser so powerful it can tear empty space​

Shanghai scientist Ruxin Li has already built the world’s most powerful lasers, and he plans a new one that can rip matter from empty space.
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(PAVEL L PHOTO AND VIDEO via SHUTTERSTOCK)


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It’s not going to be operational until 2023, but scientist Ruxin Li and his team are planning to start building their Station of Extreme Light (SEL) soon. It’ll be capable of generating brief pulses of power at 100 petawatts (PW), or 100 million billion watts, in a room 20 meters underground. Li expects it to be capable of “breaking the vacuum,” which means it will be able to rip electrons, along with positrons, their antimatter cohorts, out of thin air. While atomic energy demonstrates the possibility of converting matter into intense heat and light, no one has yet flipped around Einstein’s E-mc2 equation to convert energy to matter. And that’s just what Li has in mind. “That would be very exciting,” he tells Science. “It would mean you could generate something from nothing.”

Li expects about $100 million in funding from the Chinese government sometime early in 2018, and it would seem likely he’ll get it, having already set a word record for the most powerful laser with the Shanghai Superintense Ultrafast Laser Facility (SULF) that’s already produced 5.3 PW, and is being upgraded to generate 10 PW by the end of the year — that’s more than all of the world’s electrical grids produce, a thousand times over.
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Lasers everywhere operate similarly at a basic level: There’s a lasing material, or “amplifier,” a tube in which there are electrons that can be stimulated — SULF’s existing laser is a single cylinder of sapphire doped with titanium, about the width of a Frisbee. A “pump,” a lamp of some sort, sends photons into the tube, exciting its electrons. When the electrons return to normal from their state of excitation, they emit a photon that then stimulates more electrons, and so on, as a cascading effect, amplifying the original light source. A mirror on one side of the amplifier keeps the photons from escaping so they keep bouncing back and forth in the tube, gaining in intensity. Another mirror at the other end leaves just enough space for photons at a specific wavelength to escape, producing a concentrated beam of light. Or in the case of SULF, a microburst of light less than a trillionth of a second long.
Power equals energy divided by time, and SULF uses an approach for working that axiom developed by Gerard Mourou in 1983. Prior to his breakthrough, lasers generated longer-duration laser beams, but the production of power using such lasers is problematic. Beyond a certain intensity threshold, the medium that boosts the laser’s energy level becomes damaged, necessitating the use of bigger and bigger amplifiers. And at that, the most powerful such laser, the National Ignition Facility (NIF) belonging to the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), achieves just one petawatt in a facility that covers the length of three football fields, is 10 stories high, and cost $3.5 billion. SULF’s price tag is a comparatively cheap $10 million, and the current version can sit on a tabletop.

That was in 2018

the latest report in 2021

China on brink of laser-matter breakthrough​

Achieving this will show that matter and energy are interchangeable in any direction, as Einstein claimed


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Scientists at The Extreme Light Station say their laser will be powerful enough to produce matter and antimatter directly from the vacuum of space, allowing us to observe in a laboratory the same process that supposedly gave rise to the universe. Credit: Pixabay.

Nuclear weapons have already shown that it is possible to convert matter into large amounts of heat and light, but doing it the other way around, converting heat and light into matter, is much more difficult — but this is exactly what laboratories in China and the UK hope to achieve.
If the intended objective is reached, it could open up a whole a new branch of physics, called nuclear photonics, full of technological potentialities still unimaginable.
According to a report by Explica.co, The Station of Extreme Light, which China has been developing in Shanghai since 2018, has made significant progress in its goal of manufacturing lasers so powerful by 2023 that they could break through empty space and create matter.
The Extreme Light Station (SEL) is a laser installation designed to produce a laser with 100 petawatts (PW) of maximum power (one petawatt equals one thousand trillion watts), a goal that is expected to be achieved within two years.
Once completed, the laser will be the most powerful on Earth, with a power 10,000 times greater than that of all the electrical networks in the world combined and with an intensity 10 trillion times greater than that of sunlight, the report said.

The laser will be powerful enough to produce matter and antimatter directly from the vacuum of space, allowing us to observe in a terrestrial laboratory the same process that supposedly gave rise to the universe.

The Extreme Light Station (SEL) is a laser installation designed to produce a laser with 100 petawatts (PW) of maximum power (one petawatt equals one thousand trillion watts),

I hardly think China need 100 petawatts to hit a drone or even a tank or the 3 Indian warships hoping to prowl in South China sea.

Not even in the trillion watt, or even a billion watt


Maybe a mere 10 million watt

Which is still much much more than the game changer 25 kilowatt India is yearing to have.

And China will not even bother to call that a game changer.
As India got a lock and patent on that game changer styling that they whipped out on almost daily announcement
Blah Blah Blah bullshit, typical wumao bullshit.
 
Didn't they already have a Kali directed energy system, rigged to an IL-72 that they caused an avalanche with with back in the day ?
 
Didn't they already have a Kali directed energy system, rigged to an IL-72 that they caused an avalanche with with back in the day ?

That was just a Rumour

Gayari avalanche was not caused by any laser
 
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@DDG-80

MICROWAVE DEW for Anti UAV system

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