SamuraiBlue
Captain
Corrections:
The solid laser research is unrelated to the weapon test. Don't mix up things.
The next stage target is 50kw instead of 150kW. And according to your yahoo link, it is suspected to be shooting a UAV within 1km.
The test weapon is based on gas laser.
For the non-Japanese readers, see the highlight and translation from the linked pdf file above.
View attachment 48033
View attachment 48034
Oohh, boy trying to correct someone that read Japanese natively using Google translate.
First off any and all chart within the link below;
This is a report that had been concluded.
Basically the 50kW laser diagram and the photo is one and the same.
This is the outline of what is going to be done through the budget requisition they made for this Fiscal year.
新たな研究は、実用的兵器開発になるのか不明であるが、防衛装備庁の研究成果が、など協力会社と表裏一体となって実用的兵器開発に直結すると思われます。
新研究は、瞬間対処性が高く、精密誘導弾等のみならず、近距離から発射されるロケット弾等への対処が可能な艦船搭載型及び車両移動型の近接防空システムの実現を目指すと思われます。
高出力レーザシステムは、対処時間が限られる近接した脅威に対しての瞬間対処性及び複数の脅威に対しての多目標対処性を有することから、近接防空用として少なくとも100~150kw級になると思われます。
新たな研究は、化学レーザーではなく、公募で固体レーザー方式のひとつである「ゼノフォノンライン励起新型高出力Yb:YAGセラミックレーザー」が選定された。
防衛装備庁で進められてきた「高出力レーザーシステム構成要素の研究試作」では、化学(ヨウ素)レーザーを使用したシステムの研究が進められてきたが、米国等では固体レーザーが主流になっている。防衛装備庁も2018年以降の研究開発においては固体レーザーを基本としたシステムを計画しているようだ。
はと比べて活性中心の濃度がはるかに高いため、比較的小型ながら高い増幅利得が得られ、また発振出力も大きいという特徴を持つ。
As for ceramic lasers, read the following link.
It's a bit dated but gives you an idea of the potential of ceramic lasers, from the article;
YAG blocks are easier to fabricate and scale up in size, which also translates to greater laser power. Neodymium:GGG can be made only in sizes up to six inches. And, the ceramic material resists cracking better than the crystalline neodymium:GGG.
The transparent ceramic slabs also allow greater versatility in the pumping architecture. Instead of pumping off of the face of the neodymium:GGG slab, YAG slabs enables pumping off of the four edges of the slab. The laboratory’s slabs are framed with samarium-doped YAG, and this provides better uniformity of temperature, which improves laser beam quality. The laboratory currently is buying its YAG blocks from Konoshima Chemical Company in Japan, but it also has its own internal research and development effort in transparent ceramics for laser-gain media, Yamamoto notes.
Yamamoto shares that the laboratory has not received funding for the final push to achieve a 100-kilowatt beam with a solid-state laser. It continues to strive to improve beam quality with its existing construct. This will increase the distance a beam can travel through the atmosphere. The laboratory hopes to further validate its edge-pumping architecture as a key to significant beam quality improvement, which in turn may lead to renewed funding.