Người Mỹ gốc Việt giúp Hải Quân Hoa Kỳ tiêu diệt Hỏa Tiễn DF-21D của Trung Cộng
Trong bản Tường Trình trước Quốc Hội Hoa Kỳ (CRS Report for Congress) của Ronald O' Rourke ngảy 21 tháng 1 năm 2011, trang 38 có tường trình về công trình nghiên cứu và sáng chế vũ khí mới - Free Electron Laser (FEL) program - của Tiến Sĩ Nguyễn Định.
Khu-Trục-Hạm AEGIS sẽ được trang bị Free Electron Laser
Trung Cộng đang ngạo mạn phô trương sức mạnh của Hỏa tiễn DF-21D, đe dọa các Hàng Không Mẫu Hạm Hoa Kỳ. Nhưng lũ Chệt đâu ngờ một loại vũ khí mới mang tên Free Electron Laser (FEL) của TS Nguyễn Định sẽ hủy diệt được DF-21D, làm tiêu tan "tham vọng Đại-Hán" nhằm khống chế biển đông!
Free Electron Laser đang còn trong giai đoạn hoàn chỉnh và các chiến hạm Hoa Kỳ sẽ được trang bị công trình sáng chế loại vũ khí mới này.
Tiến Sĩ Nguyễn Định
LANL scientists are instrumental in making breakthrough for the Navy By John Severance - Sunday, January 23, 2011 at 12:00 pm
Thanks to the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), the Navy took a big step in its quest to build a powerful new anti-aircraft gun. LANL scientists have achieved a breakthrough with the Office of Naval Research’s Free Electron Laser (FEL) program, demonstrating an injector capable of producing the electrons needed to generate powerful megawatt-class laser beams for the Navy’s next-generation weapon system.
The Dec. 20 milestone, which happened months ahead of schedule, was highlighted in a two-day preliminary design review Jan. 20-21 in Virginia.
Nguyen said Boeing, which had a measurement of 32 milliampere in 1993, holds the record for measuring properties of the continuous electron beams. The project leader said, “We are not there yet but we hope to break it in the near future.” At the demonstration, Nguyen received a lot of positive feedback from members of the ONR. But he was not about to take a lot of the credit.
“This is a team effort,” Nguyen said. He credited 15 other LANL employees for helping him with the research. “The best thing is that the Navy is looking at Los Alamos as the go-to lab for this kind of technology. This is a good sign for the lab.”
Asked where this accomplishment stacks up in his LANL career, which started in 1984, Nguyen said, “It’s not the most important, but it is up there.”Quentin Saulter, the FEL program manager for ONR, said in a release the implications of the FEL’s progress are monumental.
The research is a necessary step for the Department of the Navy to one day deploy the megawatt-class FEL weapon system, revolutionizing ship defense, Saulter said. “The FEL is expected to provide future U.S. Naval forces with a near-instantaneous laser ship defense in any maritime environment throughout the world.”
ONR’s FEL project began as a basic science and technology program in the 1980s and matured into a working 14-kilowatt prototype. In fiscal 2010, it graduated from basic research to an Innovative Naval Prototype, earning the backing needed by senior Navy officials to ensure its evolution to advanced technology and potential acquisition.
“The ability to control the strength of the beam provides for graduated lethality and the use of light vice, an explosive munition, provides for low per engagement and life cycle costs. In fact, it provides an effective alternative to using expensive missiles against low value targets. Not worrying about propulsion and working at the speed of light allows for precise engagement and the resulting low collateral damage. Speed-of-light engagement also allows for a rapid reaction to moving and/or swarming time critical and swarming targets.”
“There still is a lot more testing,” Nguyen said.
Scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory, headed by Dr. Dinh Nguyen, senior project leader for the Free Electron Laser program at the lab, made a breakthrough when they unveiled an injector, below, capable of producing the electrons needed to generate megawatt-class laser beams for the Navy’s next-generation weapon system.
http://vietnamdanden.blogspot.com/2014/01/nguoi-my-goc-viet-giup-hai-quan-hoa-ky.html
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