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AFRL partners with UNM for new Directed Energy Center
by Joanne Perkins for AFRL News
Kirtland AFB NM (SPX) Nov 04, 2021

Ph.D. student Khandakar Nusrat Islam (left), and Master of Science degree graduate, Braulio Martinez (right) at work in the UNM Pulsed Power, Beams and Microwaves Laboratory. (UNM Courtesy Photo)

The Air Force Research Laboratory's Directed Energy Directorate is partnering with The University of New Mexico (UNM) to establish a center for directed energy studies, a congressionally-funded endeavor.

The Directed Energy Center will be based at UNM and jointly managed by UNM's School of Engineering and UNM's Center for High Technology Materials (CHTM). AFRL is recognized as the nation's center of excellence for the development of directed energy technologies and will oversee the founding of the center as well as the research taking place at UNM.

"We are extremely pleased to partner with UNM and to grow New Mexico's experts in the field of directed energy," said Dr. Kelly Hammett, director of the AFRL Directed Energy Directorate. "Our nation will be better equipped to move forward in this critical technology as a result of this partnership."

Directed energy technologies in development at AFRL include lasers and high-power electromagnetics directed toward a target to achieve a desired result, with applications in a variety of areas that are vital to national security.

"One of the important aspects of using DE weapons systems is that they are much less costly than traditional kinetic systems and result in less collateral damage," Hammett said. "We lead the world in these systems, but developing a robust pipeline of experts in the field is critical to maintaining our advantage."

Senior researchers, postdoctoral scholars, and graduate students will advance the modeling, design, and fabrication of fiber lasers and amplifiers to more than one kilowatt for conventional designs and near kilowatt for radiation-balanced and unconventional wavelengths. The center will create a hub of expertise in high-power, fiber laser research, and the fiber draw tower at the center will create the highest-quality fibers for high-power laser operation at various wavelengths.

Edl Schamiloglu, Distinguished Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at UNM, will lead the Directed Energy Center. He has led UNM's research efforts in microwaves and high-power electronics for the last few decades and also serves as associate dean for research and innovation in the School of Engineering. Ganesh Balakrishnan, professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, will serve as associate director of the center.

"The Directed Energy Center will make UNM one of only a handful of universities in the country with a center dedicated to that type of research and the only one that has expertise in both lasers and microwaves," he said. "Having the partnership of AFRL scientists and engineers will mean our students and faculty will have access to the highest level of expertise and world-class facilities."

Arash Mafi, professor of physics at UNM and director of the Center for High Technology Materials at the time the proposal was submitted, is principal investigator, and Schamiloglu and Balakrishnan are co-PIs on the recent $2.4 million, four-year cooperative agreement through AFRL called, "Directed Energy Center for Lasers and Microwaves."

The center will eventually be located in a new facility in the planning stages in UNM's south campus S and T park, which is expected to be operational by 2025.


Related Links
Air Force Research Laboratory
Learn about laser weapon technology at SpaceWar.com


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RAY GUNS
Army successfully tests high-energy laser weapon
Washington DC (UPI) Aug 12, 2021
The U.S. Army says it's developed a combat-capable prototype of a high-energy laser weapon. The laser, which has been 24 months in the making, can be mounted on a Stryker military vehicle and used to defend troops against drones as well as rockets, artillery and mortars, according to an Army press release this week. Over the summer, the new weapon was successfully tested in Fort Sill, Okla., in a "combat shoot-off" against a series of possible combat scenarios. The Army Rapid Capa ... read more

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