http://www.popularmechanics.com/print-this/navy-reveals-secret-device-to-des
troy-ieds?page=all

 

The Navy Reveals Secret Device to Defeat IEDs

The Pentagon has researched lasers, projectiles, jammers and everything else
to defeat improvised explosive devices. The new effort uses radio waves to
blow them up before their makers intend-but will it work?

By David Hambling

http://www.popularmechanics.com/cm/popularmechanics/images/uN/ied_defense_06
10-md.jpg

(Photo by DVIDSHUB <http://www.flickr.com/photos/dvids/> )

Last week the Pentagon revealed the existence of a new weapon in the war
against roadside bombs: a beam of radio-frequency energy that can detonate
hidden Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) at a distance. 

And its creators say the potential does not stop there-the beam could be
also used to set off other types of warheads before they reached their
target. In theory it might be used to set off ammunition before the enemy
even has a chance to fire. "The capabilities are not limited to improvised
devices," Lee Mastroianni, program manager at the Office of Naval Research
(ONR), told Popular Mechanics. 

There are many counter-IED devices that work by jamming the command signals
to bombs that are triggered by a radio signal. These are collectively known
as Counter Radio-controlled Electronic Warfare, or CREW. And there have also
been some other technologies, such as the Army's Blow Torch, which use a
high-powered beam of microwaves to damage the bomb's electronics. But the
new device targets the explosive itself. 

In one sense the technology is very old. As far back as 1895, the Indian
scientist Jagadish Chandra Bose gave a demonstration in which he ignited
gunpowder from a distance with microwaves. (A search on YouTube shows the
modern version using gunpowder in a microwave oven-don't try that at home.)
In 1924, British inventor Harry Grindell Matthews claimed that he had
developed a weapon using the same principle, an antiaircraft ray that could
set off explosives and blow up attacking bombers. "Death Ray Matthews"
became a popular figure with the press, although he never convinced
government scientists that the device worked. 

The problem has always been delivering enough energy fast enough to cause an
explosion. Lasers are a more obvious way of doing this than radio waves, and
Boeing's Laser Avenger has been tested as a means of destroying IEDs. But a
laser will only be able to target visible IEDs on the surface, whereas the
new technology is effective against concealed explosives that may be behind
layers of other material. 

The ONR remain tight-lipped about virtually every aspect of the technology,
which is highly classified. But there are enough details to piece together a
fascinating picture of the new device. 

Radio-frequency devices can output extremely powerful, short-duration bursts
of energy using a technology known as a Marx Generator. This uses a number
of capacitors that are charged in parallel and then discharged
simultaneously in series. Texas Tech University's Center for Pulsed Power
and Power Electronics has been working on this area under contract for the
ONR, with the specific aim of developing pulses strong enough to defeat
IEDs. Their 3-million-volt Marx Generator is the size of a bus, and it is
probably not a coincidence that the anti-IED beam weapon is said to be the
size of a tractor-trailer. The TTU team is also working on a one-shot pulse
generator the size of a coffee can and antennas suitable for carrying and
directing an intense burst of energy lasting less than a billionth of a
second. 

There are many questions about the new device, such as the range, width of
the beam and the types of explosives that it will work on. However, whatever
the capabilities of the current system (which are classified), the next one
may be different. "As with any radio-frequency system, the directionality
and beam width are design parameters that influence the overall system
design and can be tailored, based on application, during the design phase,"
Mastroianni says. 

It may prove impossible to generate a beam with a long enough range to be
effective, and, at this early stage, other game-stopping technical issues
may arise. Then there are also the issues that can come up when first using
new weapons. Pre-detonating roadside bombs may cause all sorts of damage,
for example, which may be blamed on the team setting the bomb off instead of
on those who planted it. However, if (as has been suggested) an airborne
version could sweep the road ahead of convoys, it could make things much
more difficult for the bombers. Especially if they happened to be next to
their bombs when the device flies overhead. 

http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/military/news/navy-reveals-secret
-device-to-destroy-ieds

 



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