Why Laser Weapons Didn't Work, But Are Now Coming Back

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  • čas přidán 14. 09. 2023
  • Laser have come a long way. They are powerful, simple and inexpensive to operate, and hit the target at the speed of light. But are they the future of warfare? This is #NotWhatYouThink #NWYT #longs
    Music:
    Shortage - Marten Moses
    Ostinato - Vieveri
    No Stone Unturned - Brendon Moeller
    Avalanche - Anthony Earls
    Linda Low - Lucention
    Orcas - Marten Moses
    Upon Entering Another Realm - Brendon Moeller
    Just the Right Amount - Arthur Benson_2
    Nitrous Oxide - Prozody
    Composite Key - DEX 1200
    Footage:
    Select images/videos from Getty Images
    Shutterstock
    Raytheon
    Lockheed Martin
    Boeing
    Leonardo
    Northrop Grumman
    US Department of Defense
    Note: "The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement."

Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @NotWhatYouThink
    @NotWhatYouThink  Před 8 měsíci +1946

    In other words, BRRRRRRRRRTTT or PEW PEW?

    • @timlin8873
      @timlin8873 Před 8 měsíci +66

      BRRRRRRRRRTTT

    • @zohaibtariq7351
      @zohaibtariq7351 Před 8 měsíci +38

      Brrrrrrrrt

    • @gamingwithshark9433
      @gamingwithshark9433 Před 8 měsíci +23

      BRRRT

    • @icekidtvshorts4504
      @icekidtvshorts4504 Před 8 měsíci +30

      BRRRRRRRRRTTT is way better

    • @cheems6193
      @cheems6193 Před 8 měsíci +1

      BRO IMAGINE 100BILLION WORTH OF DRONES RUSHING YOU BY WAVES AND FURTHER from each other's so it can be hit so easily THEN RUSHING THEM BY SEA OR AIR SUPERIORITY

  • @stuffbuddy4304
    @stuffbuddy4304 Před 8 měsíci +1473

    The idea of AI drone swarms is utterly terrifying but also kind of neat.

    • @Yaldforsvar
      @Yaldforsvar Před 8 měsíci +107

      I feel like it could be cool if it can work in construction.
      ...yes i do like factorio.

    • @Human_01
      @Human_01 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Right? It is good investment. But it can made much more reliable and potent. 😂😂 The shxt I see online (from the West) is sooo linear, it isn't even funny! 😂("🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️…")

    • @TaylerKnox
      @TaylerKnox Před 8 měsíci +22

      That’s the truth. Imagine small drone subs surfacing just off the beach - each opens up and off fly several dozen drones. Drones with small explosives. Drones that fly to specific targets. Down come transmission lines (big ones), on fire are the natural gas lines (key ones), leaking are water pipes running into town (big ones), down are internet lines, power substations, gasoline distribution nodes, computing facilities. Microwave relays. TV and radio towers. Cell phone towers. Radar antennas. No nukes no massive explosions or mass casualties yet. Just a severe crippling blow to life as normal. This is obviously why the USAF has been forced to accept reports of UAP because if they kept using ridicule and fear to keep people quiet then the US would be greatly vulnerable to such a crippling attack. Swarm attacks could also be used to drop incendiaries on buildings or start wildfires. Imagine 100 drones with ten white phosphorus bomblets flying to starts suburbs or governmental agencies on fire. All at the same time. In Winter. Chaos. We can’t have another Pearl Harbor or 9-11 event. Swarms can also be used for decapitation of government leaders. Suddenly a drone strikes the top military political and economic leaders. This is real. It’s now. Not in the future.

    • @amariner5
      @amariner5 Před 8 měsíci +11

      Terrifying.
      The "best case" is they put us out of work.

    • @amariner5
      @amariner5 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@TaylerKnox or small drones, or a small shell full of drones' that reinters the Earth's atmosphere...

  • @samael335
    @samael335 Před 8 měsíci +1476

    One needs a $4M generator to fire. The other needs $3000 of ammo per second to fire. The cost effectiveness really depends on how often they have to be used.

    • @bonk5221
      @bonk5221 Před 8 měsíci +218

      They can probably already safe 4M just by the fact you dont need a reinforced turret mount on the ship

    • @georgesmith4768
      @georgesmith4768 Před 8 měsíci +389

      A nuclear carrier won’t need an extra generator

    • @Chris-cf2kp
      @Chris-cf2kp Před 8 měsíci +132

      You have to think in the long term not the immediate. The smaller 3000 value is actually more, considering it's accrued over one second. Take the course of a year, and well you may be on your way to paying for the energy. Then again ships often have large power generation, and there's also capacitors to think about which can charge a reserve.

    • @feuerherz007
      @feuerherz007 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@bonk5221save*

    • @schwarzerritter5724
      @schwarzerritter5724 Před 8 měsíci +54

      @@bonk5221 You still need the reinforced turret mount. A weapon you can only use during nice weather is just support.

  • @daoji6373
    @daoji6373 Před 8 měsíci +748

    This is the most balanced and realistic analysis ive seen on YT. No crazy claims and solid understanding of application. Great video.

    • @ajduker
      @ajduker Před 8 měsíci +12

      That final statement leaves you thinking though 😉

    • @JackPitmanNica
      @JackPitmanNica Před 8 měsíci +4

      Dude thats what NWYT videos are like' they are just awesome. I learn a lot about narration just by listening to this channel. I don't care much about military stuff but for some reason, I never miss a NWYT video !

    • @Nobi36
      @Nobi36 Před 8 měsíci

      Thats why we love him

    • @mateuszszewczuk1700
      @mateuszszewczuk1700 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Last stament is bollocks, lasers will easly push back any satelite, you will need a quite amount of trust to Beam energy.
      So instead of transporting fuel to desired spot you will need transport it to space to transport some energy.
      Military use od lasers as main weapon isn't Smart, this kind of weapons are effective when target isn't protected .
      It's easier to make reflective coat than a 40mm thick plate.

    • @daoji6373
      @daoji6373 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@ajdukeryeah facts. Sure the video isn't perfect but it's still the best I've seen here. Obviously power transmission by laser has major limitations and satellites aren't going to be beaming energy down to collectors probably ever but the rest is pretty accurate.

  • @MurseSamson
    @MurseSamson Před 8 měsíci +416

    Great video. I used to work in this field. Here's some non-classified information and a few updates and some interesting information for your future videos on this subject.
    1) The power beaming from space is typically referred to as microwave beaming or UV beaming. The idea has been around since the 1980's, but like the Star Wars initiative the technology to make it happen hasn't existed until recently
    2) the technologies being referred to here have to do with: widely available multi-core cpu's, transistors & LED's becoming very powerful, and having very effective heat reduction. This lead to very small, low heat output, highly efficient devices, with quantum effect prediction engineered into them that allows these devices to be produced en masse without signal "Loss" or function loss due to being so tiny (circa 2015)
    3) all energy weapons suffer significantly in cloudy, smoky or misty environments. Kinetic weapons and IR target acquisition will still be a staple of the military in the future to prevent this loophole from being exploited, and it is another reason why the research and limitations are still being taken seriously. There does not currently appear to be a way to counter this effect. ⚛️
    4) Devices that use multi-focal projected microwave beaming & scattering were not covered here (i.e. "Havana Syndrome"), and I do expect that military grade devices will be available in the next few years, and most likely used by Russia in the near future against civilian and military populations. You should do a video on that one, they are very powerful anti-infantry & area denial devices, and there does not seem to be a counter to them outside of disabling the energy systems powering them. There does not appear to be any body shielding, vehicle armor or moderate thickness materials, other than a bank vault 🏦 that can stop this effect. (Maybe active EM shielding devices?)
    5) Energy beam transfers from site to site is a pretty awesome tech. They can still be channeled into a conduit or receiving stations to turn around corners due to refractive cascades inside of glass, just like a fiber optic cable. The power output right now is too high for the materials we currently have. There are other solutions that are being used in the mean time to resolve this. But it seems like it won't be long until stronger transparent materials are developed that can shunt and refocus these beams, so that's pretty awesome
    6) high energy microwave or UV beams from satellites that miss-align on their targets do exactly what your video describes. 😂 🧑‍🚒🔥🔥🚒 There is a reason we still don't use them. But pulsed arrays are coming 🛰️ and they do look to be much more safe. Still too dangerous to be in the middle of a base though; water based receiving stations or deep receiving stations appear to be the way to go.
    7) all of these devices discussed here are vulnerable to air-burst nuclear devices & salted EMP blast effects. So it is likely that NONE of these weapons would be useful in a large war with another armed nuclear nation. The use of tactical devices purely for their EMP effect is high on the list of defensive strategies for any super powers, so these devices have other limitations too but they are great for all the conflicts that aren't large scale wars ☢️

    • @MurseSamson
      @MurseSamson Před 8 měsíci +42

      Oh I forgot to mention:
      8) Hyper Sonic high altitude missiles are really not an issue for modern military defensive networks. I think you covered this in a previous video as well; the TTI (time to intercept) during the re-entry or launch phases didn't change, so nothing about the way these devices currently work changes how we intercept them or the war field in any way.
      2nd stage hyper sonic speed prevents them from being easily intercepted from low-orbit defense satellites. 🛰️🛰️ A technology that no one currently uses.
      In the future, medium-orbit range interception lasers based on satellites would be able to stop them due to the inherent increased length of the angle of interception. 🤷‍♂️
      The current devices are considered to be "false hyper-sonic" re-entry vehicles. If scientists ever figure out a way to cause the 1st & 3rd stages to also be hyper sonic, then that WOULD be something huge. But it doesn't look like that will happen anytime in the near future. (10-15 years)

    • @williamyoung9401
      @williamyoung9401 Před 8 měsíci +9

      Wow. Neat. Thanks. 👍 A lot to absorb in this technology. Basically, the bigger the power supply, the more powerful your laser. Why do I get the feeling these are going to be used as anti-satellite weapons in low Earth orbit? What's going to happen to us when we can't get on CZcams?! 😵

    • @MurseSamson
      @MurseSamson Před 8 měsíci

      @@williamyoung9401 It is possible and tbh, it would be just as catastrophic to the nation destroying them. There is a huge concern right now that the amount of low-earth debris being generated could reach a level in 30 years that would prevent humanity from leaving Earth for several hundred years. 🌐
      It's all still M.A.D. doctrine, so I would have to presume the possibility is very unlikely.
      Every other nation has a complement of very intelligent scientists, that are keyed into the global internet, regardless of that nations general policy. 💻 👩‍💻 They are well aware.
      This is a good time to point out "obvious foreign policy" decisions regarding science, when each nation has their own scientific community, that is already a part of the larger global community. 🌍🌎🌏 - There's a reason China recently banned Japanese sushi, and it has nothing to do with science! 😆😅⚛️ 🚫 👍🐟🐟🦐🦐👍

    • @filippopotame3579
      @filippopotame3579 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@MurseSamson many interesting ideas thanks for the share. Forgive my relatively uneducated remarks, but here they are 3) yes, this is a point that I felt should have been covered in the vid, as well as the range issue 4) this is interesting and scary, will read into it, 8) from what I read, what has changed is the ability for those vehicles to execute efficient evasive maneuvers, furthermore, the successful chinese test of a Fractional Orbital Bombardment System in 2021, means that it is pretty much impossible to predict when such a missile will reenter the atmosphere and with which trajectory, meaning that shooting it in re-entry phase is much harder.

    • @woli6872
      @woli6872 Před 8 měsíci

      Thanks for your detailed and professional view of this topic. There are so many videos over here but not a single one discloses the unit cost of a HEL Laser system of let's say 50 KW or the 5 KW unit on the Polaris. Do you have any unclassified information about this? I don't refer at the cost of the prototypes that should be immense but a targeted unit cost of a serial product.

  • @the7observer
    @the7observer Před 8 měsíci +442

    The US tried developing a long range laser system mounted aircraft to intercept ballistic missiles but it failed because the laser would get weaker in long distances due to clouds, particles in the air would interfere with the laser

    • @lorenkoski2714
      @lorenkoski2714 Před 8 měsíci +56

      That was also almost 30 years ago and they vastly improved the tech since then.

    • @royk7712
      @royk7712 Před 8 měsíci +158

      @@lorenkoski2714 beam attenuation is a normal physics problem. its one major problem with laser operated in atmospehere and it will always be. it would be a great weapon in space tho, unlimited range as long you can control the beam divergent

    • @lorenkoski2714
      @lorenkoski2714 Před 8 měsíci +9

      @royk7712 not gonna argue cause that is a great point, but I'm pretty sure we figured that out 👍 👌 And when it comes to a weapon, since when do we care about destroying more than just the target? Maybe in the public eye, but that's only when someone notices... And who is to say the satellites are in space? They have sub orbital capable machines...

    • @lorenkoski2714
      @lorenkoski2714 Před 8 měsíci +5

      And who's to say we don't have them on satellites already... The star wars project was very real. And I know they try to play it off as a failure or a ploy to get the Russians to overspend there budget... There's a big but there though... That and another project that most haven't heard of, the 'Titan project' which had a very similar strategy and goal.

    • @f1y7rap
      @f1y7rap Před 8 měsíci +34

      @@lorenkoski2714 whoa whoa whoa guy, next you're going to claim we & our adversaries have the ability to build lasers in the ultraviolet range with fast-discharge capacitor banks that can be charged with solar arrays and packed into a orbital package under 4tons and rockets capable of getting them there, that could focus a beam of 2sq meters and sustain a discharge of 2 1/2 minutes... because that would just be crazy. You'd be able to start fires and melt metals anywhere you wanted...

  • @ethereal2620
    @ethereal2620 Před 8 měsíci +135

    Forgot to mention the laser showstoppers:
    Humidity, in the form of rain, clouds. ☁🌧
    Also: dust, smoke, reflective surfaces. Making the target reflective can reduce the effectiveness of the beam up to 90%.

    • @user-nj7hm4xn6l
      @user-nj7hm4xn6l Před 8 měsíci +8

      bulletproof glass for an entire plane would still be cost effective if it could break with an 100.000$ missile or some seconds of minigun fire

    • @3dmazter
      @3dmazter Před 8 měsíci +3

      You forgot to mention the color blue to protect something from lasers

    • @worldprops333
      @worldprops333 Před 8 měsíci +4

      just paint it white lmao

    • @RichHomieGon
      @RichHomieGon Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@worldprops333that’s what she said

    • @worldprops333
      @worldprops333 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@RichHomieGon hilarious and original

  • @scottryals3191
    @scottryals3191 Před 8 měsíci +26

    Things that defeat lasers: rain, fog, snow, sleet, smoke, steam, mirrors. You need the guns too.

    • @mrbaab5932
      @mrbaab5932 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Mirrors don't defeat lasers unless they are high energy mirrors that only work over a small band and small angle. These are Infrared lasers and smoke, steam and fog does not have much effect because of the long wavelength. Rain shortens the range or increase the shooting duration. Not sure about snow or how quickly it would melt and evaporate.

    • @CraigTheBrute-yf7no
      @CraigTheBrute-yf7no Před 3 měsíci

      @@mrbaab5932clouds definitely absorb infrared radiation, every child knows the clouds block the suns warmth

    • @T1Oracle
      @T1Oracle Před měsícem

      Mirrors? Put the video games down. A mirror has to be tuned to the exact frequency of a laser to be effective and even then it still absorbs 50% of the energy it reflects. Meaning that a powerful laser will burn through your mirror.

    • @CraigTheBrute-yf7no
      @CraigTheBrute-yf7no Před měsícem

      @@T1Oracle wrong. A mirror is a mirror regardless of frequency. You flunked physics class.

  • @AmericanTacticalFighter
    @AmericanTacticalFighter Před 8 měsíci +251

    Direct Energy Weapons are a promising technology with the potential to change the nature of warfare, they are unlikely to completely replace traditional kinetic weapons. Instead, they may complement existing capabilities and be used in specific scenarios where their advantages, such as precision and speed, are most valuable.

    • @BiggestNoodle
      @BiggestNoodle Před 8 měsíci +1

      i understood what tgis says 💯

    • @noahtutt497
      @noahtutt497 Před 8 měsíci +42

      Hello GPT

    • @mada1241
      @mada1241 Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@noahtutt497 LOL exactly what I noticed.

    • @pablom-f8762
      @pablom-f8762 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I'm telling you, this is BatttleMech coming. Stompy robots soon to arrive.

    • @MrShadowtruth
      @MrShadowtruth Před 8 měsíci +1

      Just like *gasp* every other weapon system created so far! This sort of austere assessment in weapons development is a very rare thing to see and never fails to make me happy when I see it :).

  • @cptkirkpyro5656
    @cptkirkpyro5656 Před 8 měsíci +21

    I love how regularly you post! much appreciated.

    • @assettatang7202
      @assettatang7202 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Lasers can be stopped by resins for pennies on the dollar, this tech is already useless

  • @xato3796
    @xato3796 Před 7 měsíci +24

    The problem with laser tech is the fact that styropyro isn’t immediately being hired by the DOD as the primary director of laser armaments. The “it’s too expensive” and “it’s not effective” are blown away with what that guy does in his garage.
    The fact that you could make a UV cancer ray or invisible infrared laser in a garage has so many military applications. Each one of his videos is essentially a futuristic weapon.

    • @goferlp7011
      @goferlp7011 Před 7 měsíci

      I was thinking exactly the same.
      But I don't think that the military would except a guy that insane.

    • @MrLunithy
      @MrLunithy Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@goferlp7011 "except a guy that insane" Well they did develop nuclear weapons so there's that.

    • @bradley4465
      @bradley4465 Před 3 měsíci +1

      The military HAS tried these. Look up the ADS, the only successful directed energy armament. Styropyro’s stuff is impresssive, but it’s in a control environment, not the heat of battle. Why point a laser 5 feet away from a balloon to pop it when you can use a knife and pop it?

    • @bradley4465
      @bradley4465 Před 3 měsíci

      Lasers are extremely niche because they dissipate their energy long-range. A laser from 50 feet away will feel like being in sunlight, instead of melting skin.

  • @greenhowie
    @greenhowie Před 8 měsíci +13

    Worth noting that, while they may be called "lasers" they are invisible in actual combat, the training footage cgi adds light for visualization. It's a misconception similar to everyone assuming that radioactive = glowing green.

    • @generic6099
      @generic6099 Před 3 měsíci

      double wrong, these are *infared* lasers, which are outside the visible light spectrum, and two we already have equipment for percieving the infared spectrum, its not cgi, have you ever wondered why there are some "night vision" systems in more consumer oriented products like cctv's and monoculars? ill give you a hint: those little leds that dont seem to emmit light might have something to do with that.
      the same stuff btw, used in your tv remote or nowadays, cheaper RGB lighting kits for computers.

    • @yellowcarpet265
      @yellowcarpet265 Před měsícem

      Sure they don't look like that to us, but they aren't cgi, that's just infrared camera footage lmfao

    • @T1Oracle
      @T1Oracle Před měsícem

      @@generic6099 The wavelength of the laser is not what makes it invisible. It's the fact that a laser beam is coherent and the only way to see a coherent beam of light is for the that light to intercept the photoreceptors in your eye. Now, if you shoot a laser through fog or dust, that will scatter the beam making it less coherent and thus visible without it being pointed directly at your eye.

  • @cookingwithshaesta7530
    @cookingwithshaesta7530 Před 8 měsíci +35

    What do u call a gun that shoots salt?
    Assalt rifle! 😂

  • @F4CT0R
    @F4CT0R Před 8 měsíci +5

    I love when you cover War stuff it really fits the channel and current times!!

  • @dapperpotatoes8473
    @dapperpotatoes8473 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Note that power-beaming isn’t particularly efficient, even if it’s more efficient than gathering sunlight.
    The main issue is, we aren’t using the sunlight so any input is pure electricity gains, but using lasers results in losses and fickle connections able to be sabotaged by fog. I think we got the gist of 13:10 as well though.
    Definitely has its uses, but in no way will it replace cables and power infrastructure in the near future.

  • @MalleusSemperVictor
    @MalleusSemperVictor Před 8 měsíci +8

    I am Heavy Weapons Guy, and this... is my weapon. It weighs 2500 kilos and fires custom attenuated high wattage pulse lasers at centrimetric precision. It costs 25 cents to fire this weapon for _twelve seconds_

  • @taowroland8697
    @taowroland8697 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Sounds like the best approach to combating this lazer system is swarming + high velocity projectiles. Alternatively, a large, thin, spinning outer tungsten alloy shell which would prevent the rocket from being disarmed. (Spinning the projectile prevents heating of one area.)

  • @aterxter3437
    @aterxter3437 Před 8 měsíci +19

    About power beaming, I am quite a bit sceptical : if you take into account the losses due to efficiency of solar cells (70% loss) , and solid state lasers, the process might stay great for a niche but not reasonably expandable, not to mention the extreme costs of lasers emitters due to the necessary optical accuracy requiring extremely precise machining

    • @THE-X-Force
      @THE-X-Force Před 7 měsíci +1

      We've put nuclear powered rovers on another planet. Retail off-the-shelf CPUs are made at the three-nanometer scale. Precision parts and power delivery aren't really problems for direct energy weapon systems .. at least not problems that can't be overcome with time. The real issues are much more basic...
      Clouds. For land based targets, a simple smoke grenade is protection. For aerial targets .. any atmospheric diffusion is an issue. That and beam coherence over long distances are the two things stopping these weapons from being used right now. If you can find a way to mitigate them, you'll be financially set for life.

    • @Elristan
      @Elristan Před 7 měsíci +1

      It's utterly unusable as portrayed here, you also have to account for the ability to focus the beam, which is highly dependent on the wavelength and the emitter dish size. Simply put, at orbital distances it is completely impractical... And even at shorter ranges on the ground, as you pointed out, it's not exactly efficient, but could have niche applications (rough terrain, nature reserves, you name it). All in all, I don't expect power beaming to be a mainstream thing except maybe between space infrastructure bits once we actually operate orbital manufacturing (meaning very big emitter/receiver dishes *and* no attenuating/interfering atmosphere)

    • @davedixon2068
      @davedixon2068 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@Elristan well the military is a niche operation and they are rarely interested in cost if it gives them a major or even minor advantage.

    • @simmerke1111
      @simmerke1111 Před 3 měsíci

      I'd be more worried about the obvious tell of which direction the laser is coming from. From a military point of view at least. It'd be kind of counter intuitive to put a cheap drop full of receptors. But if it only has one side/one receptor the enemy can map out a direct line of where the laser is.

  • @dhawthorne1634
    @dhawthorne1634 Před 7 měsíci +3

    "You never have to reload". That's not entirely true. These lasers take a LOT of energy to fire. This means one of two solutions; generation or storage. Generators are expensive, heavy and aren't very good at coping with large fluctuations in demand. Storage would only require some cheap and comparatively light-weight (though bulkier) super-capacitors that can dump hours worth of generation almost instantly. However, once they discharge below a certain point, they will need time to charge back up again.
    In the long term, these systems will require replacement electron guns, lasing materials and lenses; which I suppose is more like replacing a firing pin, reloading brass and swapping a barrel on a traditional gun.

  • @wolfiemuse
    @wolfiemuse Před 7 měsíci

    I just discovered this channel and these types of videos and the artillery one is perfect edutainment content. Subbing

  • @johnostambaugh8638
    @johnostambaugh8638 Před 8 měsíci +4

    250kW High Energy Laser cost how much to buy? How big is the laser? How big is the power supply? Maintenance of lasers? What is the total cost?

  • @DrownedInExile
    @DrownedInExile Před 8 měsíci +3

    Power-beaming sounds like something out of TRON. Fascinating!

  • @garywatson
    @garywatson Před 8 měsíci +1

    The net capture drone at 2:32 is called DroneHunter and is made by Fortem Technologies in Utah. It has a miniature phased array radar onboard to seek the target.

  • @ironagentm544
    @ironagentm544 Před 8 měsíci +2

    The Future of Warfare is a Sabaton song about the first tank, which was released on September 15, 1916. This video was posted on September 15.

  • @MMDaura
    @MMDaura Před 8 měsíci +6

    It is very cost effective. Nice vid👍

  • @Boop__Doop
    @Boop__Doop Před 8 měsíci +5

    i want all lazers to make the "MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM" of a microwave

    • @blink182bfsftw
      @blink182bfsftw Před 8 měsíci +1

      Petition congress to not accept the lasers until they make the noise

    • @antimitsu
      @antimitsu Před 8 měsíci +1

      mmmmmmmmmmmm :D

  • @XxXnonameAsDXxX
    @XxXnonameAsDXxX Před 8 měsíci +2

    Powerbeaming is a pipedream. We need more than 100 years for that. Laser modules have very low efficiency, and photovolatic modules that are very specific might have 40% efficiency. At the end of the day you might need 1kw to transmit 100 watts. And they are extremely visible. Imagine shining kilowatts of lasers into the sky. Plus atmospheric scattering comes into play after a couple hundred meters. But overall its a cool idea like all the research topics mentioned here.

  • @RipOffline
    @RipOffline Před 8 měsíci +29

    Imagine a post apocalytic scenario where humans have to hide like rats on a daily circle where lazers from above roast everything on their way

    • @_sandy_
      @_sandy_ Před 8 měsíci +4

      that would be a pretty sick story plot, and a pretty sick in the other way real life plot

    • @ididntmeantoshootthatvietn5012
      @ididntmeantoshootthatvietn5012 Před 8 měsíci +10

      Thats kenshi

    • @regarrzo
      @regarrzo Před 8 měsíci +7

      It's called the sun

    • @amog8202
      @amog8202 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Halo reach

    • @_sandy_
      @_sandy_ Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@regarrzo the sun is a deadly lazer, after all

  • @shelbyblackmore-mg4nv
    @shelbyblackmore-mg4nv Před 8 měsíci +3

    You make wargames seem so fun!

  • @frankscraprobot5209
    @frankscraprobot5209 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I mean come on, laser weapons, beaming energy from space? We're finally turning into a sci-fi movie and I'm so for it.

  • @a_razz1476
    @a_razz1476 Před 8 měsíci +1

    who ever came up with the acronym HEL(high energy lasers) needs a raise

  • @TrainTruck
    @TrainTruck Před 8 měsíci +10

    When they say it's way ahead of its timeline, it just means keep at it not throw it away. Cause this stuff should of been made long ago and there ain't any excuses other than fear for what would others do next. But still, good video.

    • @lorenkoski2714
      @lorenkoski2714 Před 8 měsíci +4

      They've been around for a long time and we do use them… Most people just don't realize it and its not publically reported on.

    • @Tyiriel
      @Tyiriel Před 8 měsíci +2

      ...They should've been made... before the technology needed to actually produce anything of use existed?
      I think you should listen what the dude behind the cool CG shots is saying before you make a dumb comment.
      It's also a defensive tool and absolutely useless for offensive operations, so there's that.

    • @mateuszzimon8216
      @mateuszzimon8216 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@Tyirielthey are here now, this is in use

  • @blurglide
    @blurglide Před 8 měsíci +39

    If lasers proliferate, misssiles will just be equipped with heat reflectors or ablative shields. Hypersonics can already deal with heat, and offer short dwell time, so lasers won't be very useful for things like that. They'll be useful for small drones though

    • @MR_Foffe
      @MR_Foffe Před 8 měsíci +29

      Well, yeah, the same way you can deal with flares and all other kinds of countermeasures. The more countermeasures the missiles have to avoid, the harder it becomes. If missiles and drones have to majorly adapt to these new countermeasures it might affect their performance and their defense against other kinds of countermeasures.

    • @Tyiriel
      @Tyiriel Před 8 měsíci +4

      It's about the targeting systems that are guided either through a laser pointer or a heat sensor. Firing a thick beam of pure light at that poor sensor will fuck it up and make the missile fall out of the sky in confusion, which is the intended purpose. It was never to my knowledge meant to destroy the missile itself.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Also RPGs and and similar man-portable weapons. I can see them being being installed around sensitive sites.

    • @MillionFoul
      @MillionFoul Před 8 měsíci +4

      A missile's seeker cannot be reflective (and of course no reflective surface is reflective enough when the lasers get big enough: even 1% of several kilowatts can quickly heat a very small area to the point of discoloring) or ablative, and ablatives add a lot of weight very quickly. While those may very well be counter-counter measures employed on future weapon systems, they'd hardly negate the utility of the original counter measure.
      In any case, lasers are a point defense type of thing, it's much better the destroy enemy missiles further away, with your own missiles, which do not particularly care if the enemy missiles are shiny.

    • @recoil53
      @recoil53 Před 8 měsíci

      Dust not only only degraded reflectivity, but burns.
      And anything that travels that fast will be scratched up by any particles in the air. Not accounting for the fact that we can already shoot down Russian "hypersonics". The Aegis system is supposed to be better than the Patriot system.

  • @Linusgump
    @Linusgump Před 8 měsíci +1

    You missed an opportunity at the end to say, “Let’s hope it’s Not What You Think,” as you show that forest fire footage.

  • @peymanjvn8955
    @peymanjvn8955 Před 8 měsíci

    that was awesome man

  • @genericjonathan4115
    @genericjonathan4115 Před 8 měsíci +26

    So with the last technology listed, using lasers as a method of power transfer, we could theoretically have electric planes that never land.

    • @christophedlauer1443
      @christophedlauer1443 Před 8 měsíci

      With the proposed system of orbital "Power transfer satelites" - the plane would no longer be necessary.
      If you could direct that amount of energy through the atmosphere, then you cut out the middle man and apply that energy straight to a stationary target.
      From polictical assassinations to precise destruction of infrastructure - unless your enemy is in a fortified hole underground, your "civillian relais" could be turned into a terrifying weapon George Orwell would be prould of.

    • @epicgamer42069
      @epicgamer42069 Před 8 měsíci +8

      until there is any amount of weather: clouds, fog, rain, ect... lmao

    • @whatsupbudbud
      @whatsupbudbud Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@epicgamer42069 If we beam energy straight from orbit into high-altitude planes, clouds, rain and fog are not an issue I presume.

    • @epicgamer42069
      @epicgamer42069 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@whatsupbudbud that does solve the issue but I find it questionable if its possible and safe to transfer the large amount of power even a typical narrow body airliner needs to fly.
      I can find estimations of the electricity required to get a 747 airborne to be anywhere from 90 megawatts to 190 meggawatts which is an insane amount of power to be shooting through the air with a laser beam. And in this video he only talked about transmitting in the number of hundreds of watts.
      And then you have all of the safety problems with shooting down such powerfull beams of energy all over the place. How do you prevent the beam from cooking the plane and everyone in it. Or missing its target and hitting something else and killing a person or causing damage to property.

    • @whatsupbudbud
      @whatsupbudbud Před 7 měsíci

      @@epicgamer42069 perhaps it could be a multi-layered solution where there are relatively stationary receivers at higher altitudes which relay the power at some specific height horizontally to the aircrafts. This would solve the danger to ground level to some extent. No idea about power and such since this is not my field.

  • @ADR1fley
    @ADR1fley Před 8 měsíci +26

    As a correction, the CWIS (Navy) doesn't use tracer or explosive rounds. The C-RAM (Army/ground based) uses self destructing tracers.

    • @PiousSlayer
      @PiousSlayer Před 8 měsíci

      Poor fish, lol. (Kidding of course.)

    • @garywatson
      @garywatson Před 8 měsíci

      And the rounds cost more like $200 each if they have a proximity fuze.

    • @MurseSamson
      @MurseSamson Před 8 měsíci

      The video they used here is from another video, that runs simulations vs. certain weapon systems. It was not developed by this channel, and I've seen it on the original source.
      These are people using software, not real bullets. 👍 It's all good man

    • @MillionFoul
      @MillionFoul Před 8 měsíci

      @@garywatson They don't have proxy fuses, just a delay fuse that self destructs shortly after they were supposed to impact, which both makes them safer and provides a visual aid to people on the ground for how close the incoming rounds are. I doubt you can make a 20x102 proximity fused projectile that is reliable, has self destruct capability, tracer, and enough explosive mass and shrapnel to be useful versus incoming artillery shells.

    • @ADR1fley
      @ADR1fley Před 8 měsíci

      @@MurseSamson my comment has nothing to do with the videos used. CWIS uses like, plain tungsten rounds. C-RAM uses MPT-SD rounds.

  • @xandrewvondiue522
    @xandrewvondiue522 Před 8 měsíci

    Awesome vid. Blew my mind

  • @alimuchenik9807
    @alimuchenik9807 Před 8 měsíci

    Great video!!! Congratulations!!!!

  • @Fake_Slicer
    @Fake_Slicer Před 8 měsíci +5

    0:22 I love how the drone touches the water and just flops and does flips

  • @epichistorymaker1888
    @epichistorymaker1888 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Did anyone else notice that one of the companies in this video is called “Faro”?
    Take a wild guess what the name of the company that created all the robots in Horizon Zero Dawn was.

    • @tungsten2009
      @tungsten2009 Před 8 měsíci

      They still need nanobots first tho

  • @stgeorgeist
    @stgeorgeist Před 8 měsíci

    If a beam deviates from its target?? it automaticaly cuts out?

  • @reifenverlustdeluxe6936
    @reifenverlustdeluxe6936 Před 8 měsíci

    I was reading in a magazine probably 5 years ago how autonomous warfare could look like, kinda fascinating we are already here

  • @carlojoselitochua2954
    @carlojoselitochua2954 Před 8 měsíci +39

    I hope Railguns, Lasers & High-power Microwaves will become the future of warfare in place of cold-war era weapons systems primarily intended for delivery of nuclear weapons due to being scalable, cost-efficient & future-proof as well.

    • @DefinitelyNotEmma
      @DefinitelyNotEmma Před 8 měsíci +23

      I hope that you're not unironically hoping for this. As Microwave and other directed energy systems have a large potential mission profile for domestic use, and I don't think that's something to be hopeful or positive about.

    • @christophedlauer1443
      @christophedlauer1443 Před 8 měsíci

      @@DefinitelyNotEmma True, but t"hermonuclear megadeath because MAD failed" will always beat "so Google can now murder the president of Liechtenstein at a whim" in the public eye.
      Yes, the later has significant problems, but the first is an elemental threat anyone alive during the 80s feels in their bones.

    • @thanos7469
      @thanos7469 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@DefinitelyNotEmma hard to sure, range is another problem though , too much air atoms, would make laser alot less effective, so it can't be use for alot of missions

    • @tallspy7150
      @tallspy7150 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Personal opinion. Nukes have proven to be incredibly effective. We used 2 of them almost 80 years ago, and now war has become "let's solve this problem at a lower level because we know what the light at the end of the tunnel is.

    • @loctite417
      @loctite417 Před 8 měsíci +5

      ​@@tallspy7150except this doesnt apply to countries without nukes. Top countries have gatekept nuke so weak countries will always be outgunned. This is why Ukranian war was possible in the first place and putin can sort of wave at his nukes whenever things dont go his way

  • @velox__
    @velox__ Před 8 měsíci +3

    What kind of efficiency is reached with powerbeaming? I can't imagine it's very good

  • @samurai8698
    @samurai8698 Před 8 měsíci +2

    About Lidar scanning, it used to be fixed on either a tripod or a car, but some portable scanners are starting to come out (Navvis), and while you have to walk gently with it so it doesn't screw up it's positioning, it's only a matter of time before drones with lidar scanners start to come out.
    Also, to correct the narrator, it doesn't take 1000000 photos per second, but 1000000 Y, X, Z coordinate points, along with a panoramic picture to add color to the 3D model.

    • @flexinclouds
      @flexinclouds Před 8 měsíci

      Lidar was used in Samsung's Galaxy s20 ultra for taking reaallyy damn good pictures. It was used to scan the depth of a picture a lot better. But they unfortunately ended up ditching it in the next gen phones. I want one though, just so i can use 3d scanning apps..👍😄

    • @mateuszzimon8216
      @mateuszzimon8216 Před 7 měsíci

      IRC Apple still have Lidar scanner

  • @hamentaschen
    @hamentaschen Před 8 měsíci

    Dude. You rock!

  • @----.__
    @----.__ Před 7 měsíci +4

    Great video. I would suggest the equation for cost shouldn't be the price of the defence weapon vs the price of the aggressor's weapon; ie $3m to take down a $2k drone. I'd suggest the better parameter would be asking the price of what you're defending. If it's a multi-billion dollar installation or asset then the price is worth it! Depending on the value of what you're defending both in terms of price and capability (what it offers) easily offsets the cost to defend it in most cases.

    • @jpt3640
      @jpt3640 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Well. The problem is if someone spent 2 million dollars to attack with 1000 drones you would have to spend 3 billion dollars to counter them. Not gonna work out in the long term.

  • @Dr.Coconut1245
    @Dr.Coconut1245 Před 8 měsíci +21

    EDIT SO PEOPLE SEE: this is NOT about the usage of lasers as weapons, this is about the usage of lasers as energy transfer around a base or from space.
    I would be concerned about the eye safety of these long range laser energy systems. given that 1 watt lasers can blind you before you can blink, pumping kilowatts of power though the air seems like a mistake could easily cause burns on skin or permanently blind anyone who got in its way.

    • @jr2904
      @jr2904 Před 8 měsíci +4

      That's the point lol, don't get those pointed at you

    • @GabbaGandalf420
      @GabbaGandalf420 Před 8 měsíci +11

      Thats a weird concerne If a bullet hits ur eye ur blind aswell😂

    • @1.-ulysses334
      @1.-ulysses334 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Just don't get hit bro.
      Kidding aside, It's not that different getting a hole in your head by a bullet or by a laser.

    • @Hizsoo
      @Hizsoo Před 8 měsíci

      Safety goggles exist.

    • @MillionFoul
      @MillionFoul Před 8 měsíci

      @@Hizsoo They generally only block a narrow spectrum of light, and it is very easy for a given laser to be outside the blocked spectrum, thus bypassing safety devices.

  • @youdidntsuffer
    @youdidntsuffer Před 8 měsíci +2

    But wouldn't an infrared reflective panel or coating negate the infrared energy as it wouldn't heat the target up?

  • @talscorner3696
    @talscorner3696 Před 8 měsíci

    Moving energy by laser would be INSANELY cool!

  • @THE-X-Force
    @THE-X-Force Před 7 měsíci +3

    The problem is clouds & other atmospheric disturbances. Also, beam coherence over long distances. If you can figure out how to effectively mitigate those two issues, you'll be more than financially set for life, you'll be in legacy-money territory.

    • @JohnNy-ni9np
      @JohnNy-ni9np Před 7 měsíci

      Well, as a youtuber you don't need to solve these problems, you don't need to even mention these problems, and yet you still earn loads of money.

  • @poopeater1232
    @poopeater1232 Před 8 měsíci +3

    can i use drones to attack ships now?
    no, the anti air is a deadly lazer.

  • @eorfdengineer
    @eorfdengineer Před 8 měsíci +2

    But I still have one question. If the object is completely covered in mirrors do laser weapons still work?

    • @MaxBrix
      @MaxBrix Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yes, high energy lasers vaporize mirrors.

    • @DajesOfficial
      @DajesOfficial Před 8 měsíci

      @@MaxBrixbut you certainly don't want to look in the direction of that mirror at the moment it is being vaporized by a laser

  • @divineculturetalk99.9
    @divineculturetalk99.9 Před 8 měsíci

    ❤❤❤ Great content ❤❤❤

  • @alasad3136
    @alasad3136 Před 8 měsíci +4

    They have a laser weapon we have a mirror shield😏

    • @Boeing_hitsquad
      @Boeing_hitsquad Před 8 měsíci

      Then just use an EM system like Leonidas or SEWIP

  • @Ilix42
    @Ilix42 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I played SinCity 2000, I know what happens when the beam misses the power dish…

  • @Chooseyouruniquehandl
    @Chooseyouruniquehandl Před 8 měsíci +1

    Next year: Are mirror the future of Drones?

  • @teppygray4314
    @teppygray4314 Před 8 měsíci +1

    In NWYT we trust

  • @joekerby6330
    @joekerby6330 Před 8 měsíci +3

    talked with the people who worked at the Sandia national lab that developed the LASER for the 707 testing. There is a reason why this isn't going to proliferate like you state...the distance is proportional to the energy required to do damage. the energy required for the Jet based laser was enormous, yet it was only good at relatively short distances....

    • @mateuszzimon8216
      @mateuszzimon8216 Před 7 měsíci

      So basically we Ukraine can put them in nuclear plants to defend

    • @joekerby6330
      @joekerby6330 Před 7 měsíci

      @@mateuszzimon8216you are missing the point. If you want a laser powerful enough to sweep the sky at a great distance the power-supply would have to be as big as an entire large building

  • @Featinwe
    @Featinwe Před 8 měsíci +24

    12:55 - I really like the idea of a laser beam comming from cosmos through a thick layer of snowing clouds...
    A pity you didn't mentioned about some SERIOUS drawback lasers have - they are useless at long ranges (atmosphere interference) and in bad weather. Half of the ideas you mentioned do not make much sense because of that.

    • @NotWhatYouThink
      @NotWhatYouThink  Před 8 měsíci +15

      Thank you for your comment. Regarding the SSPIDER program (power beaming from orbit), that initiative is looking to transmit the collected power down to earth using Radio Frequency. You can read more about it here: afresearchlab.com/technology/space-power-beaming/

    • @blackmcbain3145
      @blackmcbain3145 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Sound waves can be used to extend range by disturbing atmospheric fog and barometric pressure

    • @mridulsharma3402
      @mridulsharma3402 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@NotWhatYouThinkDo think that SSPIDER is similar to SpaceX’s starlink but in different field

    • @GBR9794
      @GBR9794 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@mridulsharma3402 it is not starlink smh. their purposes are even different. elon havent ever mention they would want to transfer energy that way. on top of that, the power output of starlink way smaller.

    • @jordanledoux197
      @jordanledoux197 Před 8 měsíci

      It's a pity that you didn't mention that photons aren't limited to the visible spectrum, Featinwe. Half of your ideas don't make much sense because of that.

  • @Waltuhbeige
    @Waltuhbeige Před 7 měsíci +1

    It’s costs four hundred thousand dollars to fire the weapon, for twelve seconds

  • @henrynautilus3072
    @henrynautilus3072 Před 7 měsíci +1

    "Raytheon's modular hel" could be a scifi metal band name

  • @TaylerKnox
    @TaylerKnox Před 8 měsíci +90

    They have been around for decades - and in use - a game changer - therefore kept very much in the black - and always announced as a future weapon as a type of camouflage misinformation.

    • @zohaibtariq7351
      @zohaibtariq7351 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Yup

    • @blckspice5167
      @blckspice5167 Před 8 měsíci +4

      No, they've only recently been tested in combat. Before they were always too big and fragile to use

    • @royk7712
      @royk7712 Před 8 měsíci +5

      yeah, its too bulky and power hungry. its pratical use maybe can only be found in warship

    • @daoji6373
      @daoji6373 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Nah definitely not. I work with lasers and it's really only been in the last 13 years that diode tech has achieved high enough power handling, efficiency and brightness at the wavelengths required to charge pump the fibers. Non LED sources generate too much heat and are 100x less efficient so couldn't be used (eg xenon tubes) for these extremely high powers. And the power supplies also require relatively new GaAs semiconductors to supply the enormous current requirement. Really it's only in the last decade that this tech has become practical.

    • @assettatang7202
      @assettatang7202 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Lasers can be stopped by resins for pennies on the dollar, this tech is already useless

  • @Lew114
    @Lew114 Před 7 měsíci +22

    The story about Archimedes using mirrors and sunlight to burn ships is almost certainly a myth. Also, a LASER is completely different from concentrated sunlight.

    • @haukionkannel
      @haukionkannel Před 7 měsíci +4

      There is mythbusters video about that!

    • @shinji1264
      @shinji1264 Před 3 měsíci

      They used sails back then so....

  • @radiosnmore
    @radiosnmore Před 8 měsíci

    Man that fero lidar be spinning helllllaa fast.....im use to seeing 300 rpm but that is insane

  • @mikeock3164
    @mikeock3164 Před 8 měsíci

    Would you be able to cut power supply for an entire convoy or base with some smoke n mirrors?

  • @alexfrost1601
    @alexfrost1601 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Another question is the efficiency - how much energy does it take to generate the laser of certain power and how much of that can be caught and converted back to electricity for example.

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Converted back to electricity?

    • @studentcopyofburgerking8108
      @studentcopyofburgerking8108 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Sniperboy5551Like, how much of the power the laser *uses* to charge something actually makes it to the thing being charged

    • @daoji6373
      @daoji6373 Před 8 měsíci

      It depends on the wavelength but at the IR wavelengths of interest (~1um) they're less than 40% efficient. oh and that's just the laser. You'd lose even more at the photovoltaic side.

    • @catcatcatcatcatcatcatcatcatca
      @catcatcatcatcatcatcatcatcatca Před 8 měsíci +2

      Solarpanels are much more efficient at converting solar power than plants are, but still around the 20-30% range. World record is 47% in lab conditions.
      Using specific frequency and directed light would result in more efficient cells, but it’s important to note that these numbers are based on the light (and power) actually hitting the solar-cell.
      Distance would quickly add losses as anything from simple temperature gradients to air moisture and small particles would be between the laser source and solar cell.
      For some context: Reagans Star wars project was so bonkers in goals that the scientists working on it quickly realised no existing source of energy could come even close to harming an ICBM. The most feasible way to even get the input power was using nuclear explosions, and directing energy from them as laser to the target, in the nanoseconds before the explosion would destroy the satellite.
      For beaming energy “anywhere on earth”, I’m sceptical we can really do much better. Any solution not using nukes would boil down to redirecting sunlight, and usually making gigantic structures with wide surface area are so much cheaper to build on the ground instead of in orbit. While the atmosphere, scattering of light and clouds subtract significantly from sun’s energy, so would any redirection, convertion or anything else we could do for sunlight.

  • @MattPerdeck
    @MattPerdeck Před 8 měsíci +3

    I guess this becomes interesting when these systems get small and cheap enough that Ukrainian or Russians soldiers in their trenches start using them to take down enemy drones, without the power supply unit requiring too much fuel or it being so big that it gets spotted and taken out by the enemy.

  • @grandlotus1
    @grandlotus1 Před 7 měsíci

    Outstanding report. Information dense.

  • @MikevomMars
    @MikevomMars Před 8 měsíci +1

    This video did not mention that all laser systems are highly dependent on atmospheric conditions (humidity etc.) which is a huge disadvantage.

  • @badappel27
    @badappel27 Před 8 měsíci +3

    what happens if your power supply gets hit is this still a reason for cram/cwiz

    • @Iamthelolrus
      @Iamthelolrus Před 8 měsíci

      Cram/cwis need a power supply as well, same end result.

    • @SnakZ
      @SnakZ Před 8 měsíci

      If your power supply is hit then you got many problems as nothing is going to work.

    • @badappel27
      @badappel27 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Iamthelolrus I did not think of that good point

    • @badappel27
      @badappel27 Před 8 měsíci

      @@SnakZ true

    • @harrisonclark3799
      @harrisonclark3799 Před 8 měsíci

      As if cwiss need no electrical to operate

  • @TheGelatinousSnake
    @TheGelatinousSnake Před 8 měsíci +7

    I currently have little confidence they will soon replace current systems but seems well worth including on vessels. I trust that at bare minimum, lasers can burn out the sensors on missiles. Given the cost of each short, well worth the shot. Added layer 👍

  • @LuizBernardo33
    @LuizBernardo33 Před 3 měsíci

    Amazing 😻👏👏👏👏

  • @marcelmessner7478
    @marcelmessner7478 Před 7 měsíci

    What is the efficiency of microwave or laser transmitted energy?

  • @nightsage217
    @nightsage217 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Energy Weapons also push development of miniature fusion cell unit as well.
    Just like the submarines, little down time, massive return.

    • @staringgasmask
      @staringgasmask Před 8 měsíci +4

      There isn't even normal fusion yet, that's all scifi

    • @archangel4670
      @archangel4670 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Man played fallout and thought it was a documentary lmaoo

    • @Tyiriel
      @Tyiriel Před 8 měsíci +1

      How the fuck does this help fusion? There's already a massive laser powered fusion reactor in the US, and it's not worth the effort.

    • @recoil53
      @recoil53 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@staringgasmask There is fusion, just not sustained fusion with a positive net energy.
      The Lawrence Livermore tests did it twice, though I can't remember how long.
      If we're very lucky, we can have commercial reactors by 2040.

    • @thanos7469
      @thanos7469 Před 8 měsíci

      @@recoil53 fission reactors is good enough, we just need to put these fission reactors on more areas, would be more useful than fusion reactors

  • @redshift0433
    @redshift0433 Před 8 měsíci +16

    I went to an airshow in Australia and got to a laser system that would be placed on a vehicle in the place of a M2 Browing for example on the bushmaster. this small laser was able to cut a hole in several cm of metal in less than 3 seconds. can't image what it would do to a human. You could be walking around and start taking fire from a silent target with no idea where its coming from

    • @h31212
      @h31212 Před 8 měsíci

      Yeah I heard the Jeovah convention will enforce the addition of food colorant to all laser based weaponry to make it more "fair"

    • @Mr.JesseR
      @Mr.JesseR Před 8 měsíci

      it's not effective against humans, requires direct lines of sight and well, too much energy needed

    • @miriamweller812
      @miriamweller812 Před 8 měsíci +2

      3 seconds is a hell lot of time, even more on a moving target.
      That you can damage the human body pretty easily, yeah... you can throw a piece of wood for that.

    • @Mr.JesseR
      @Mr.JesseR Před 8 měsíci

      @@miriamweller812 or laser absorbent material like sealite will work

    • @mateuszzimon8216
      @mateuszzimon8216 Před 7 měsíci

      U know we talk about 50 kiloWatts+ laser's, 3s isn't long with current technology, range 7km, and focal point size of coin.

  • @edvinasraisutis1688
    @edvinasraisutis1688 Před 8 měsíci

    In short - we are at the very beginning of the development and manufacturing of the foundation and it's technology for a Dyson swarm :) thank You for the video

  • @MeepMeep88
    @MeepMeep88 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I remember one of the protest, a huge crowd with those green lasers all shined it on a drone and was able to take it down lol..

  • @graog123
    @graog123 Před 8 měsíci +3

    It's going to be trivial to make those cheap attack weapons more reflective or more tolerant to heat, and still overcome the more expensive laser setups. Doesn't matter if it costs 50 cents to fire it, you still paid millions to build it & it'll get destroyed anyway

    • @ethanwilliams1880
      @ethanwilliams1880 Před 8 měsíci

      More reflective? The heat will completely warp that. More tolerant to heat? Sure, but how does your laser guided missile protect its guidance system from lasers without impacting the guidance? Heat resistant/sinking materials are also quite heavy, and we are talking about airborne vehicles. Also given all of that, a more powerful laser would still overcome them. I'm not saying it's impossible, but trivial? Lol, no.

    • @btf_flotsam478
      @btf_flotsam478 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Soldiers cost a ton of money to train but get wrecked with a few bucks of ammunition. Military assets are designed under the assumption that a success costs them a lot more than it costs you, so having a military base cost a lot and destroy attacks on the cheap is quite standard.

    • @graog123
      @graog123 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@ethanwilliams1880 trivial
      What do you think happens to a laser pointing at a mirror? Just like Light, heat is energy, energy can be reflected. Sound can be reflected, all sorts of energy can be reflected.

    • @ethanwilliams1880
      @ethanwilliams1880 Před 3 měsíci

      @@graog123 Heat is not reflected by mirrors. Heat is also not electromagnetic. I'm sure heat can probably be reflected, but we don't know how yet. Sound is just vibrations, which are naturally reflected when they hit a suitably solid object, but what does that have to do with the discussion?
      You also missed the point about the lasers. Guidance systems are a thing necessary to make the missile hit its intended target. A defense laser like this operates by wrecking the guidance, not destroying the missile (usually). The guidance receiver can't be a mirror, because then the laser that guides the missile won't work.
      Ultimately, if it were trivial, weapons manufacturers would already have designed their missiles to resist lasers.

  • @okithdesilva129
    @okithdesilva129 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Awesome! I waited for the military laser era as a huge fan of lasers! Specially high power lasers!

  • @bronkolie
    @bronkolie Před 8 měsíci

    Nice video. It would be nice if the acronyms shown on screen were also narrated so you could listen to the video without needing to be looking all the time

  • @uniworkhorse
    @uniworkhorse Před 8 měsíci

    1:20 what's this thing called? Never seen a drone like this!

  • @KK-jd7ub
    @KK-jd7ub Před 8 měsíci +6

    Just wrap the drones with reflective material.
    Laser proof🧠

    • @SnakZ
      @SnakZ Před 8 měsíci

      Just need more power then 🤣 put a whole nuclear engine behind it. No more problems 🤣

    • @edwardbrown3721
      @edwardbrown3721 Před 8 měsíci +1

      It's not as simple, light and radio waves are both electromagnetic radiation, a reflective drone can't be piloted

  • @gavrielmarcus831
    @gavrielmarcus831 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Could you please do a video about the new Israeli submarine?

    • @Janoip
      @Janoip Před 8 měsíci +4

      as a German (where it was build) i also would find it interesting and what systems Israel has equipped it .

    • @Egg.335
      @Egg.335 Před 8 měsíci +1

      so you are israelli

    • @gavrielmarcus831
      @gavrielmarcus831 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Egg.335 Maybe and maybe not but either way it is an interesting subject especially with all the rumors surrounding it

    • @theprogressivecynic2407
      @theprogressivecynic2407 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Egg.335 Israel and Germany have a ton of military R&D partnerships, and a lot of weapons designed in Israel are built in Germany (or the USA). For example, most of the EU uses the Spike ATGM, which was developed by Israel, and is manufactured in Germany under contract as the EuroSpike.

    • @theprogressivecynic2407
      @theprogressivecynic2407 Před 8 měsíci

      @@gavrielmarcus831 I wouldn't believe any of the rumors surrounding their sub fleet. The IDF is notorious for keeping an extremely tight lid on their submarine capabilities, so most of the rumors are based on the silhouette. It has a much larger sail than normal Dolphin class subs, and so there is a high likelihood that it can carry the sort of weapons that absolutely nobody wants to get hit by. The general consensus is that it either is going to carry a significant quantity of nuclear missiles, or act as a mobile C&C base for drone deployments (basically, an underwater aircraft carrier for drones). Hopefully, it doesn't get deployed, as that would mean a pretty significant war.

  • @Ytevel
    @Ytevel Před 7 měsíci

    Hi. Thanks for this amazing video. From a lot of videos that I saw , it take the beam at list 3 seconds to destroy any kind of air vehicle, ether it is a drown or a missile. So in case of a swarm of drowns or a lot of missiles in the air it will b not affective. Maybe it will take one or tow but the rest will go through. Am I correct?

  • @TheGameReview217
    @TheGameReview217 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Would an effective counter to anti-drone lasers be to have the drones drop payloads such as smoke grenades to obscure a direct line of fire? Would smoke from something like a smoke grenade be good enough at diffusing the light to prevent the drones from being burned by the lasers?

    • @btf_flotsam478
      @btf_flotsam478 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Why have drones drop smoke grenades when you can fire smoke grenades at a base without needing to get close?

    • @davedixon2068
      @davedixon2068 Před 4 měsíci

      @@btf_flotsam478 but then the lasers shoot down the smoke grenades before they get there so you need the smoke grenades to have smoke grenades attached to them so they aren't targeted

  • @bredsheeran2897
    @bredsheeran2897 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Yes, directed energy weapons are the future.

  • @lllPlatinumlll
    @lllPlatinumlll Před 8 měsíci +4

    Reminds me of a science fiction novel I read, in the story humanity divided into two rival groups with multiple planets under their control, one side scorched the other group from their planets with lasers until there was nothing left. YAY we can almost wipe ourselves out in a new and exciting way! Go humans!

  • @justingolba9037
    @justingolba9037 Před 8 měsíci

    the only thing i worry about with this channel, is that if he ever runs out of ideas for videos, im not sure what i'd do.

  • @nunyabidness9758
    @nunyabidness9758 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Lasers get defeated by composites that cost $1 per kilogram with minimal thickness and weight added. It's going to lead to composite hardened wild weasel munitions tailored for taking down DEW's.

  • @zacharymossman2590
    @zacharymossman2590 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Just ask the people of maui

  • @politicsuncensored5617
    @politicsuncensored5617 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Laser and drone warfare will become the weapon of modern militaries in the very near future. Drones used in warfare have already proven their worth in terms of - "Gold". With the use of drones pilots are not put into harms way as it has been. Another excellent video. You continue to make great videos well worth watching. Shalom

    • @Calbjrd
      @Calbjrd Před 8 měsíci +1

      Imagine a drone with a laser strapped to it

    • @deriznohappehquite
      @deriznohappehquite Před 8 měsíci +1

      I feel like people are forgetting the last fifteen years of drone strikes and stuff.

    • @politicsuncensored5617
      @politicsuncensored5617 Před 8 měsíci

      I think before long we will see it. Shalom @@Calbjrd

    • @politicsuncensored5617
      @politicsuncensored5617 Před 8 měsíci

      I don't know if they are forgetting the past years, but you do have to admit the last 18 months has brought it out a lot more. Shalom@@deriznohappehquite

  • @robertopiedimonte2078
    @robertopiedimonte2078 Před 8 měsíci

    First of all I love your statements, to my knowledge, are always exact and never commonplace.
    Second I like the way you mix humor and technology.
    This clip surprise me with many news, but laser was near future weapon from fifties, in the sixties they become so popular we find it on Star Trek, in the eighties they came out of the laboratories to fly into empty space finding founds for a great research program (Reagan star wars), and so on...
    it's 50 years I'm waiting for a laser weapon, even just some sort of energy weapon, and we are here still talking...
    Laser is a Chimera due to its growth potential in the long term, but for these new elements on Battlefield drones, the last evolution of Rafael Typhoon IV mount (aka Mk38 in US Navy) using 30/173 mm round (lethal up to 2 metres away for a dismounted soldier) with proximity fuze requires a burst of only three shots to destroy it one up to 1 or 2 nm away depending on the speed at cost of 100/150 dollars per burst.
    On ground battelfield intended target could be everywhere, so drone can pass miles from gun making it ineffective. Even laser at 10/15 statute miles or 20 kilometres will find itself out the line of sight, but is much better.
    Just for laughs a 127 mm / 5" naval gun round have a proximity range against a cruise missile of 10 metres/ 33 feet probably 5 times more for target as drone, so killing swarm of drones with every round.
    This is not the way to fight a war, none give Ukraine a weapon capable to hit inside Russia the source of drone (by factory, deposit, supply convoy, bridge, roads, etc), nor one very peculiar war could establish rules for future wars...
    Thank you

  • @devinsmedts5023
    @devinsmedts5023 Před 8 měsíci

    At 4:00 you say that they woudln't need to be reloaded, but most of these lazer systems use capacitors that sharge up before a burst is sent out, kinda like a railgun
    Also they overheat very quickly so usage time varies

  • @LobsterDado
    @LobsterDado Před 8 měsíci

    1:18 that patch is really cool

  • @aymonfoxc1442
    @aymonfoxc1442 Před 8 měsíci

    Can we attach a speaker to let people know the laser is firing and make it sound cool?

  • @ELCobb83
    @ELCobb83 Před 7 měsíci

    Man, every year that we move further away from Terminator 2's release, we get a year closer to Skynet...

  • @benjaminandersen1097
    @benjaminandersen1097 Před 8 měsíci +2

    but uhm, what if, and color me crazy, the drone or missile had a simple reflective paint job?

  • @naghs2726
    @naghs2726 Před 8 měsíci

    Do lasers work in the rain though? Are they strong enough to vaporize all the rain between it and the target and still damage the target?