The Air Force Can Use an Electromagnetic Pulse to Kill Enemy Computers

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One of the US Air Force’s most high-tech weapons is a tool that can’t hurt people — but it kills electronic devices.

The CHAMP (Counter-Electronics High-Powered Microwave Advanced Missile Project) is a computer-frying device that emits a strong blast of targeted microwave energy that can take down enemy data centers and infrastructure without blowing anyone up.

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The Air Force recently confirmed that CHAMP is an operational system, although it’s not yet able to be deployed in a remote-controlled missile. Congress recently pressured the Air Force to prepare the tech for battle, though it may blow its 2016 deadline.

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CHAMP is accurate enough to target individual buildings, which means it can pinpoint specific systems to take down instead of wiping out everything in a general area. Unlike jammers, CHAMP will destroy or permanently damage electronics, which means it’s an incredibly potent weapon for screwing with enemy data centers.

Boeing successfully tested a missile carrying CHAMP back in 2012, knocking the power from every electric device in a two-story building. For that test, it used a AGM-86 Conventional Air-Launched Cruise Missile, but the Air Force Research Laboratory recently nominated Lockheed Martin’s Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile (JASSM-ER) to carry the CHAMP weapons. A drone or aircraft could also carry the weapon, depending on the mission.

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This is far from the first time the military has experimented with electromagnetic pulses as weapons. Nuclear warheads also generate electronics-frying electromagnetic energy, but of course they also destroy a large geographic area and kill untold numbers of civilians. CHAMP is a step forward in electronic warfare because it’s so well-suited to minimizing collateral damage.

[Digital Trends via CNN]

Image of simulated electromagntic pulse via Boeing


Contact the author at kate.knibbs@gizmodo.com.
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