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28 Jun 2012 Perhaps that's why US Army researchers are so excited about recent successful tests of a laser-guided lightning-bolt weapon. “We never got tired of the lightning bolts zapping our simulated (targets)," project leader George Fischer said. They tested the weapon at the Armament Research, Development and
21 Jun 2012 Scientists and engineers at Picatinny Arsenal, N.J., are busy developing a device that will shoot lightning bolts down laser beams to destroy its target. Soldiers and science fiction fans, you're welcome.
28 Jun 2012 Thought that title might get your attention, but shooting lightning bolts down laser beams is just what a device being developed at the Picatinny Arsenal military research facility in New Jersey is designed to do. Known as a Laser-Induced Plasma Channel, or LIPC, the device would fry targets that conduct
28 Jun 2012 The US army has successfully tested a laser device that shoots out 50 billion watt-powered bolts of lightning.
28 Jun 2012 Over at Picatinny Arsenal, the research and development facility and proving ground for the U.S. Army's weaponry, engineers are developing a device that shoots lighting bolts along a laser beam to annihilate its target. That's right: lighting bolts shot down laser beams.
2 Jul 2012 Engineers at the Army's Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey have managed to send lightning bolts down a laser beam. And they didn't even use The Force (as far as we know). The idea of firing targeted lightning bolts — in this case, a short 500 billion-watt burst of optical power — has been a staple of science
5 Jul 2012 There's been a fair bit of buzz online of late over experiments with a technology called a “laser-induced plasma channel" – essentially, laser-guided, artificially generated lightning bolts – at the Army's Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey. But, militarily, what's it good for? The problem, one well-informed source
1 Jul 2012
US Army scientists are developing a weapon which can fire a laser-guided lightning bolt at a target. The Laser-Induced Plasma Channel (LIPC) is designed to hit targets that conduct electricity better than the air or ground that surrounds them. The weapon went through extensive testing in January. George Fischer, lead
29 Jun 2012 The US Army wants to add lighting bolts to its arsenal of weaponry. Scientists and engineers at Picatinny are developing a device that will shoot.
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