Meet
THOR, the Air Force's New Drone-Killing Microwave Gun
Coming to US bases very soon.
"It's built to negate swarms of
drones," Anderson said. "We want to drop many of them at one time
without a single leaker getting through."
U.S. military bases across the globe may soon have a New
Mexico-made, high-powered microwave weapon at their disposal to instantaneously
down swarms of enemy drones.
The Air Force Research Laboratory at Kirtland Air Force
Base unveiled the weapon Thursday morning in a live demonstration with local
reporters, who watched the system effortlessly knock a hovering drone out of
the sky with an invisible and inaudible electromagnetic wave.
The $15 million systems, called the Tactical High-Power
Microwave Operational Responder, or THOR, disabled the unmanned aerial vehicle
in a flash, sending it spiralling to the ground the moment the electromagnetic
ray hit it. Had more drones been flying within THOR's expansive scope, they
also would have dropped in an instant, THOR program manager Amber Anderson
said.
"It operates like a flashlight," Anderson said
after the demonstration. "It spreads out when the operator hits the
button, and anything within that cone will be taken down. It engages in the
blink of an eye."
The AFRL built the machine on an expedited, 18-month
timeline to get it into warfighters' hands as fast as possible, given the
increasing military threat from drones, said Kelly Hammett, head of AFRL's
Directed Energy Directorate in Albuquerque. The system is aimed at protecting
military bases from multiple-drone attacks, which the Air Force has identified
as its No. 1 priority for emerging "directed energy," or microwave
and laser, defence systems.
That's because conventional defences offer limited
protection against swarms of incoming drones. Sharpshooters or military jets,
for example, can't take out 50 drones at once, but THOR can.
"It's built to negate swarms of drones,"
Anderson said. "We want to drop many of them at one time without a single
leaker getting through."
AFRL spent $15 million to develop THOR, which could cost
about $10 million to produce if the U.S. Department of Defence chooses to
deploy it, Hammett said. It was built in cooperation with three companies,
including global engineering firms BAE Systems and Leidos and the Albuquerque
firm Verus Research. The project created 20 full-time jobs in Albuquerque
outside the AFRL, Hammett said.
If THOR is adopted by the Defence Department, it could
mean a lot of more local jobs, because the system is likely to be manufactured
here, at least partly.
"If the Air Force or Army decide to procure it, that
would be big for Albuquerque," Hammett said. "It would establish a
manufacturing and production base right here, representing hundreds of millions
of dollars, if not more."
The AFRL has been developing microwave and laser defence
technology for years, including collaboration with Raytheon, which built its
own anti-drone microwave system in recent years that it successfully tested
against swarms of UAVs at Fort Sill, Okla., in December 2017, and at White
Sands Missile Range in southern New Mexico last fall.
Those tests, however, showed some limitations when
integrating Raytheon's system with other military technologies and battlefield
tactics and protocols, Hammett said. Raytheon has since invested more resources
to further develop its system, which could still be deployed in the future by
the military.
But AFRL chose to also build THOR to offer different
operating capabilities and more options for the military to rapidly meet urgent
defence needs, Hammett said.
It's designed for rapid deployment wherever needed, with
the microwave antennae and foundation stored in a shipping container
transported on a flatbed truck. The equipment is stored in parts for easy,
snap-together assembly in just three hours.
"It takes two people to set it up and three to tear
it down," Anderson said. "You can take it to the field, rapidly set
it up and it's ready to fire. It's designed as a turnkey system."
A handheld remote control rotates the antennas in all
directions as needed, providing 360-degree defence against drones. The firing
mechanism and overall system control are operated from a laptop.
This article originally appeared at Task & Purpose. Follow Task
& Purpose on Twitter. This article first appeared in 2019.
Source: https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/meet-thor-air-forces-new-drone-killing-microwave-gun-65541
Visit: https://vymanikaero.com/
Coming to US bases very soon.
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