Laser defense for
pilots
Canadian product shows promise for civilian
use
Aircraft landing at night are particularly vulnerable
to laser attack. AOPA file photo.
A laser attack can be terrifying.
Incidents causing sudden blindness at low altitude with critical seconds of lost
situational awareness have left surviving pilots badly shaken. Photographs and
videos cannot capture the impact.
The typical weapon of choice is a laser
designed for boardroom presentations, astronomy, or a similar legitimate use,
and the perpetrators may be as ignorant as many pilots about the effects on a
flight crew during a critical phase of flight. (Aircraft are nearly always
targeted at low altitude.) The beam from a low-power device can spread over
distance from a pinpoint source to cover a windshield. Green lasers that have
grown in popularity in part because they are cheap to make are also the most
destructive.
The number of laser attacks on aircraft has increased
sharply in the past decade, from 283 in 2005 to nearly 4,000 in 2013, according
to the FAA.
At least half a dozen companies currently advertise
laser-blocking eyewear online, though these glasses are generally adapted from
other applications - essentially modified sunglasses that use older
technologies. They block a significant amount of non-laser light, and have not
been certified for aircraft use.
The FAA has provided advice for pilots
on how to respond to a laser attack in this document (that makes no mention of
eye protection already on the market).
"Green is the color the human eye
is most sensitive to. We see more green information than any other color," said
George Palikaras, a physicist and CEO of Metamaterial Technologies, Inc., and
its subsidiary Lamda Guard, based in Nova Scotia.
Palikaras' company
anchors a coalition including the Canadian government, various university
laboratories, helicopter operators, and aerospace giant Airbus that aims to
equip civilian pilots with protection from laser attacks that can have profound
psychological as well as physical effects.
"We have had discussions with
pilots who were in tears," Palikaras said. The memory of pain, blindness,
inability to see even cockpit instruments carried "such a psychological impact
from this that they were in tears telling the story."
While law
enforcement efforts have increased in response to a fourteen-fold increase in
laser attacks reported between 2005 and 2013 (rewards of up to $10,000 for
information that leads to arrest of those who intentionally target aircraft with
laser pointers were announced in June), Palikaras said those with malicious
intent will not be swayed by public service announcements or the threat of
jail.
Glasses, goggles, and other eye protection that filters out the
laser beam have long been used to protect eyesight, though it has proved
challenging to engineer eyewear for aviators that blocks a laser light while
still allowing enough other light through-including the lights used to mark
runways, obstacles, and cockpit instruments at night.
Palikaras' company
has developed a thin film (made with a process called 3-D holography) that can
be applied to curved surfaces (similar films made by others have so far been
limited in how much they can curve), block both green and blue laser light
simultaneously (many products currently available block only one color), and
retain at least 80 percent transparency to other kinds of light. He said
products currently on the market offer no more than 70 percent transparency,
and, along with products developed for military use, have other limitations:
laser beams striking from angles beyond 10 degrees may not be reflected
effectively, while metaAIR, as Lamda Guard's patented thin-film coating has been
dubbed, can reflect beams striking at angles up to 45 degrees.
"We
believe we can improve on that as well," Palikaras said.
Nano
technology
The desired properties of selective reflection are achieved by
creating a specific geometric arrangement of extremely tiny particles within a
clear substrate. The nano-composites (also referred to as metamaterials) reflect
laser light but allow other light to pass through a film that can be 100 times
thinner than a human hair.
Palikaras said Airbus will lead the effort to
test and certify a windshield application for fixed-wing aircraft, and the
companies hope to have a windshield film ready for certification testing in
2015. The company is meanwhile working with Canadian police agencies to test a
visor coated with the same thin film.
"They have, right now, the most
important role in this ... to find the culprits," Palikaras said.
That
task is complicated by current protective eyewear technology. A police
helicopter crew struck by a laser needs time to don protective gear, and will
generally respond first by turning away from the light source. Palinkaras said a
visor transparent enough to be worn throughout the flight will make an important
difference in identifying and arresting perpetrators: "The impact of this custom
solution is that they can turn into the beam right away."
The U.S. Air Force has developed eyeglasses able to
block laser light while remaining mainly transparent to other visible light.
U.S. Air Force photo.
Military option
The U.S. Air Force has also been
contracting for thin film technology to protect pilots' eyes from lasers in
recent years. Lt. Col. Scott Bergren of the Air Force Life Cycle Management
Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, offered (through a
spokesperson) brief, written responses to questions about the laser-blocking
glasses made by Teledyne Technologies Inc., which was awarded a contract worth
up to $20.4 million in 2012 to develop, test, and deploy up to 8,500 pairs of
laser-blocking eye protection. Bergren said eyewear has been developed in
preference to a windshield treatment because it may be cheaper to produce (the
aforementioned Teledyne contract works out to $2,400 per pair), and eyewear can
be donned or doffed at the pilot's discretion.
Palikaras said the
advantage of a windshield treatment is that pilots do not need any extra tasks
(finding glasses, cleaning them, putting them on)-particularly during phases of
flight that are already busy.
"All the pilots have such a high workload
already we don't want to burden them further," Palikaras said. "We don't really
believe that the goggles are the right product for the pilots even though we
could be selling now hundreds of pairs of goggles which are transparent enough,
by the way."
Palikaras said it remains to be seen how expensive this thin
film will be by the time it is fully developed, tested, and certified for
aircraft installation. He said there is growing interest from aircraft
manufacturers, and expects to find ways to make it available to private aircraft
owners as well as commercial operators.
"If I knew that I had ... 100
small planes that would be interested, we can do some kind of arrangement,"
Palikaras said. While investors rightfully expect profits, "our goal here is not
to make a profit from the smaller planes."
Bergen said there are no plans
to make the spectacles developed through the Air Force program available for
civilian use.
Frost & Sullivan applauded Lamda Guard for
developing a specialized film that can protect pilots from laser attack.
PRNewsFoto/Frost & Sullivan.
Palikaras would also like to help
educate pilots who have not found out firsthand just how dangerous a laser
strike can be, and is working to create a realistic simulation of the experience
using eye-safe lasers that would show a pilot just how hard it can be to see
runway lights, instruments, and other critical details in case of an unblocked
laser attack.
"We're happy to give this as a service free of charge,"
Palikaras said. "We are interested in solving the problem, but also creating the
awareness within the pilots group. And get them as a partner to help us make the
product the right fit."
Lamda Guard has yet to bring its thin film
metamaterial solution to market, but it is already winning kudos for the effort:
Frost & Sullivan, a California firm with a global focus on technology,
market research, and growth consulting, recognized Lamda Guard Nov. 4 with an
award for global product leadership.
Abonner på:
Legg inn kommentarer (Atom)
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.