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/O\
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o ++ O ++ o
Not so much: a laser is extremely small in diameter. It would never, ever be able to highlight the sky the way it has been captured in the photo. It COULD have been done through the really low tech and relatively low-intensity commercial 'sky beams'-lasers you see a lot with festivals and so on. But not the high intensity, high energy single beam from YAL-1A.Wijgert IJlst wrote:Judging on it, the blue light could in that case been caused by a laser shining on the exhausttrails/vortex.
Think we can conclude it is a nice technology testbed, which can perhaps be used for future purposes (on satalites perhaps?), and will never see operational service within the USAF I would guess.Wikipedia wrote:In an 6 April 2009 press conference, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates is recommending the cancellation of the planned second ABL aircraft and that the program return to a Research and Development effort. "The ABL program has significant affordability and technology problems and the program’s proposed operational role is highly questionable," Gates said in making the recommendation.
There was a test launch just off the coast of California on 6 June 2009. If successful the new Airborne Laser Aircraft could be ready for operation by 2013. President Obama had originally said that he was cutting the fund for that program but it was recommended by Secretary of Defense that they should keep it. On 13 August 2009 the first in-flight test of the YAL-1 culminated with a successful firing of the SHEL at an instrumented test missile.
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency on Aug. 18 2009 successfully fired the high-energy laser aboard the Airborne Laser (ABL) aircraft in flight for the first time, the modified Boeing 747-400F aircraft took off from Edwards Air Force Base and fired its high-energy laser while flying over the California High Desert. The laser was fired into an onboard calorimeter, which captured the beam and measured its power.
The US can mess around with lesser equipped states without any big problems or risks, but shooting down a strategic nuclear missile from another nuclear power (which Russia still is) just for testing its own laser system can be a little tricky at least. Its a little bit different than intercepting each others planes and sometimes shoot at them.Wijgert IJlst wrote:Have we seen the YAL-1 Airborne Laser (ABL) in action above the Norwegian skies, while intercepting and destroying a Russian RSM-56 Bulava?
Could be a plausible explanation for the strange sighting above the Norwegian skies last night.
Here some pictures, video footage and articles on the internet:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/v/rkx7myyAk4s[/youtube]
http://translate.google.com/translate?j ... l=no&tl=en
The YAL-1A ABL is capable of intercepting and distroying ballistic missiles such as a Bulava. The US Gov. would not admit they test the ABL on a Russian Missile, and the Russian them self have RSM-56 Bulava still in a test stage where 7 of the 13 test launches have failed. For them it would be a dissaster if it would come to light it has been shot down by the USAF.
So what do you think?
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