Starfire Optical Range

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The Starfire Optical Range, as viewed from a helicopter.
The Starfire Optical Range, as viewed from a helicopter.
Three green lasers being fired at a single spot in the sky from the Starfire Optical Range.
Three green lasers being fired at a single spot in the sky from the Starfire Optical Range.
A FASOR used at the Starfire Optical Range for LIDAR and laser guide star experiments is tuned to the sodium D2a line and used to excite sodium atoms in the upper atmosphere.
A FASOR used at the Starfire Optical Range for LIDAR and laser guide star experiments is tuned to the sodium D2a line and used to excite sodium atoms in the upper atmosphere.

Starfire Optical Range is a United States Air Force research laboratory on the Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Its primary duty, according to the official website, is to "develop and demonstrate optical wavefront control technologies". The range is a secure lab facility (SLAB) and is a division of the Directed Energy Directorate of the Air Force Research Laboratory.

The lab's optical equipment includes a 3.5 meter telescope (which they claim is "one of the largest telescopes in the world equipped with adaptive optics designed for satellite tracking"), a 1.5 meter telescope, and a 1 meter beam director.

According to an article published on May 3, 2006 in the New York Times, research is being conducted at the laboratory into how to use ground-based lasers to disable satellites; that is, as an anti-satellite weapon. According to the article, research is being conducted so that the ground-based laser would be able to use adaptive optics to remove the effects of atmospheric turbulence.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • William Broad, "Administration Researches Laser Weapon", New York Times (3 May 2006).[1]

[edit] External links


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