(from CBS St. Louis) HILL AIR FORCE BASE, Utah – Boeing has successfully tested a new missile that can take out electronic targets with little collateral damage.
The aerospace company tested the microwave missile [in October] on a two-story building on the Utah Test and Training Range where computers and electronic systems were turned on to gauge the effects of the missile’s radio waves, according to a Boeing press release.
The missile, known as CHAMP (Counter-electronics High-powered Advanced Missile Project), fired a burst of High Powered Microwaves at the building, successfully knocking out the electronic systems and computers, and even taking out the television cameras recording the test.
“This technology marks a new era in modern-day warfare,” Keith Coleman, CHAMP program manager for Boeing Phantom Works, said in the press release. “In the near future, this technology may be used to render an enemy’s electronic and data systems useless even before the first troops or aircraft arrive.”
Seven targets were taken out in total during the one-hour test which left no collateral damage.
Coleman believes this can be a huge advancement forward in non-lethal warfare.
“Today we turned science fiction into science fact,” Coleman said in the press release.
James Dodd, vice president of Advanced Boeing Military Aircraft, is hoping to get these microwave missiles in the field sooner rather than later.
Members of the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory Directed Energy Directorate and Raytheon Ktech also took part in the test.
Boeing Defense, Space & Security division is headquartered in St. Louis.
CBS News local St. Louis. All Rights Reserved. Reprinted here for educational purposes only. May not be reproduced on other websites without permission from CBS News. Visit the website at stlouis.cbslocal.com. (Note: This article was published at CBS on Oct. 25, 2012)
NOTE TO STUDENTS: Read "Background" below before answering the questions.
1. What is CHAMP?
2. How does CHAMP work?
3. Define collateral damage.
4. How might this technology be used against America's enemies in the near future?
5. How could it change the type of warfare in which we are engaged?
6. What two words best describe your reaction to this technology? Explain your answers.
7. The Times of Israel reported in October on what Iran might do if it obtained a nuclear weapon (if it had the capability to carry out an electromagnetic pulse attack):
"There is a third possible scenario [of what Iran would do]: The Iranian military could carry out an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack against Israel, the US, or Europe. Such an attack could cause severe damage to the electrical grid in the targeted nations, to the extent that the routines of daily life - centered around the use of electrical power - could be halted, for a short or even long period of time. While there is much speculation as to what exactly an EMP would do to electrical appliances and digital devices - scientists have differences of opinion over how badly they would be affected (the world hasn’t really experienced a direct EMP blast yet, so much of the speculation is based on educated guesses) - the far-greater concern is what an attack would do to the electrical infrastructure in a targeted area. If an EMP strike is large enough, or there are enough such strikes, the blasts could knock out power plants, electrical substations, and other sensitive equipment, causing a massive power failure that may take weeks or months to overcome. Data centers housing servers would likely be badly damaged as well, as would be communications systems."
a) Do you think Boeing's successful test of CHAMP is a positive step in protecting the U.S. and our allies? Explain your answer.
b) Ask a parent the same question. Discuss your answers.
CHAMP uses electromagnetic pulses: