Us Navy destroyer doing its best Dr Evil impersonation

Big Mountain Hélà

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US Navy Destroyer Fires 60 KW Helios Combat Laser​

February 2, 2025 by Brian Wang
The US Navy released a new photo of USS Preble (DDG-88) firing her HELIOS laser weapon.

It is a 60 kilowatt combat laser.
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The USS Preble is the first U.S. Navy vesselequipped with HELIOS, a 60-kilowatt-class directed energy laser weapon developed by Lockheed Martin. It is also the first laser weapon integrated with the Aegis combat system, a key feature that enhances the ship’s ability to track, engage, and neutralize threats.
It provides a cost-effective countermeasure against drones, small boats, and other asymmetric threats. The U.S. Navy has been expanding its directed energy arsenal.

The U.S. Navy’s High Energy Laser and Integrated Optical Dazzler and Surveillance (HELIOS) system faced its first airborne target during a test in 2024, a first-time for the HELIOS program that will help the U.S. Navy inform other programs under the Directed Energy and Electric Weapon System effort.


Scarce details were published in the 2024 annual DOT&E report. According to the report, the Center for Countermeasures (CCM) supported the U.S. Navy’s test effort by collecting imagery in support of validation and verification of the HELIOS system.

“CCM supported the Navy’s demonstration on USS Preble (DDG 88) to verify and validate the functionality, performance, and capability of the HEL with Integrated Optical Dazzler and Surveillance system against an unmanned aerial vehicle target. CCM collected imagery of the engagements to support the evaluation of system performance.”
DOT&E FY2024 ANNUAL REPORT
U.S. Navy FY2025 budget documents had a test scheduled for HELIOS against an anti-ship cruise missile. It is unclear if the test mentioned by DOT&E is related to that planned test, but the U.S. Navy had planned for post-test analysis of an anti-ship cruise missile engagement in FY2024.


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U.S. Navy RDT&E budget documents for FY2025 mentioning ICARUS, an Integrated Counter Anti-Ship Cruise Missile (ASCM) Remote Unmanned Shot.

The HELIOS weapon test is part of a broader U.S. Navy family of laser weapons being developed by three different divisions in an aim to mature the technology related to maritime applications of laser weapon systems while improving power efficiency and beam quality.

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Source: Congressional Research Service. Navy briefing slide provided by Navy Office of Legislative Affairs to CRS on May 16, 2024.

The U.S. Navy’s laser weapons programs fall into two broad families. One is the Navy Laser Family of Systems (NLFoS). The U.S. Navy’s Surface Warfare Division (N96) manages development of Surface Navy Laser Weapon System Increment One (HELIOS) and the Optical Dazzling Interdictor, Navy (ODIN). The other is the U.S. Navy’s Innovation, Technology Missions, and Test and Evaluation Division (N94) family, which included development of the Solid State Laser – Technology Maturation (SSL-TM) and Ruggedized High Energy Laser (RHEL).


Outside of the U.S. Navy, the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering is managing HELSI, the force-wide High Energy Laser Scaling Initiative that aims to scale up laser power while improving efficiency and beam quality downrange.


The U.S. Navy has completed work on SSL-TM and did not request funding for SSL-TM in FY2025. Final disposition of the installed prototype on USS Portland (LPD 27) was planned for Q4 2024. Technology developed under SSL-TM was transferred to the U.S. Navy’s HELCAP program.


HELIOS on USS PREBLE
HELIOS fitted on USS PREBLE. Naval News photo.

According to the U.S. Navy’s Office of Legislative Affairs, the U.S. Navy’s work on platforms developed by N96 and N94, alongside force-wide efforts advanced by the HELSI effort, will help inform decisions on the U.S. Navy’s High Energy Laser Counter Anti-Ship Cruise Missile Project (HELCAP). HELCAP seeks to deliver a 300+ kilowatt laser platform to the U.S. Navy, selected from one of the scaled laser systems developed under HELSI.

 

Uachet

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Black Self-Sufficiency
I saw this earlier and didn't quite know what I was looking at. I expected a rail gun. I guess we just leapfrogged rail guns.


US Navy ditches futuristic railgun, eyes hypersonic missiles​



So yea, the US was doing it but find hypersonic missiles a more compelling thing to push for, since hypersonic missiles have a significant range advantage.
 

Big Mountain Hélà

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The Navy is going to have to prioritize defending against drones. A couple of cheap high speed drones can render this useless.

Navy HELIOS Laser Aboard USS Preble Zaps Drone In Latest Test​

Service brass have clamored to get shipboard laser weapons operational, as other similar systems have suffered delays and cancellations
GEOFF ZIEZULEWICZ, TYLER ROGOWAY
POSTED YESTERDAY

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The Navy has disclosed that the Arleigh Burke class destroyer USS Preblesuccessfully test-fired its High-Energy Laser with Integrated Optical Dazzler and Surveillance (HELIOS) system to take out an aerial target drone in Fiscal Year 2024. It was the latest major demonstration of the surface fleet’s shipboard laser ambitions, even as other U.S. military laser efforts have faced a reality check in recent years.
Preble’s drone zapping was “to verify and validate the functionality, performance and capability” of HELIOS, and this latest step toward moving shipboard lasers into a fully operational state was revealed in the Pentagon’s annual Director, Operational Test and Evaluation (DOTE) report that was released Friday night.
Little else was disclosed in the DOTE report regarding where and when Preble, a Flight IIA Arleigh Burkesubvariant, fired its laser. The warship shifted homeports from San Diego to Japan in September, just a few days before the end of FY24. TWZ has reached out to the Navy for more information on the test and where HELIOS currently stands, and this report will be updated when that information comes in.
A rendering of the HELIOS system in action aboard a Navy destroyer. (Lockheed Martin)
A rendering of the HELIOS system in action aboard a Navy destroyer. (Lockheed Martin)
Either way, it’s a capability that Navy brass has been increasingly clamoring for, especially in the past year, as Navy warships shoot down an at-times daily barrage of drones and missiles fired by Iran-backed Houthi rebels over the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. Those battles and other global flashpoints have raised continued concerns about the Navy draining its finite missile stocks, as the pacing threat of China looms on the horizon. TWZ has reported on several aspects of the Navy’s battle against the Houthis, including a tally of ordnance expendedduring more than 400 engagements against the Houthi arsenal of aerial drones, anti-ship cruise missiles, and anti-ship ballistic missiles.
“When I was in Bahrain as [the Destroyer Squadron 50 commanding officer] 10 years ago, the afloat staging base USS Ponce had a laser on it,” Naval Surface Forces Commander Vice Adm. Brendan McLane told reporters in early 2024, before the Surface Navy Association conference. “We’re 10 years down the road, and we still don’t have something we can field?”
Indeed, the 60-kilowatt HELIOS and other long-promised directed-energy weapons have been a long time coming for the surface fleet. As TWZpreviously reported, it was first spotted aboard Preble in 2022. Its debut predates the Houthi fight, but is the type of system that would seem primed to help, at least to a limited degree, ease missile expenditures during similar operations.
 
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