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U.S. military officials are currently developing new laser weapons capable of shooting down enemy drones, which could be installed in a Marine Corps Hummer, a joint light tactical vehicle, or other light ground vehicles, the Pentagon official said yesterday. But this is not the only advanced weapon that the U.S. military is currently developing ...
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In this respect, the U.S. well-known scientific and technological media "Business Insider" has been sorted out for us "eight U.S. troops to enter the first technology", the following is the specific content:
Transformer TX UAV
The American military giant Lockheed Martin is building a Transformer TX drone that can be transformed from an ordinary military ground vehicle into a military helicopter that could be manually operated by the military and be able to fly automatically in the air. It is reported that the UAV is expected to be delivered to use in 2015.
Wildcat Robot (Wildcat robot)
The Wildcat robot, designed by the American Boston Power Company (Boston Dynamics), was designed specifically for the American army, which can move at 16 miles per hour on flat ground and can use four feet to make different movements to run or turn in different ways. Of course, in addition to speed, Wildcat robot also has excellent balance ability. The device is designed to provide more diversified support to the U.S. military in the future, and can eventually move faster on more terrain.
Armatix Digital Revolver
The Armatix digital revolver is configured with an electronic security mechanism, which means that the pistol can be set to only partially fingerprint (compared to the built-in database) or smart watch pairing to be activated, or set to be activated at a fixed time of the day. Moreover, the rear of the Armatix digital revolver is also provided with an LED indicator, which is available when the light is green, and red for disabling.
M32 Multi-purpose grenade launcher
In addition to firing 18 40mm-calibre grenades in a minute, the M32 multi-purpose grenade launcher can also launch a floating device with a miniature parachute that can be used to photograph ground images in the air. It is reported that as early as April 2006, the U.S. military in Iraq for the United States Marines allotted 9000 M-32-type rotary grenade launchers to test its field combat capability.
Corner 40mm grenade launcher
The corner 40mm grenade launcher is developed, manufactured and marketed by the corner shooting Company (Corner Shot Holdings, LLC). The first half of the weapon system is a camera-mounted weapon, and the second half is a grip, butt and LCD monitor assembly and battery. The first half is hinged on a rotatable mechanism that allows the front half of the ejector frame to rotate to the left or to the right and to launch. When used, a weapon is mounted on the first half of the frame, the camera captures the target screen to the rear half of the monitor, the shooter can be targeted and shot through the monitor. It is reported that the system can not only aim at the side of the shooting, but also as the ordinary shoulder-like weapons to the front directly aiming at shooting, shooting range reached 150 meters.
Apache AH-64 Combat helicopter
Apache AH-64 combat helicopters are equipped with advanced target interception, marking Systems (TADS) and Pilot Night vision systems (PNVS), which greatly improve their operational capabilities under complex meteorological conditions and nighttime conditions. It is reported that the target interception and identification system includes a high resolution color TV, a "direct Vision optical Device" telescope system, automatic tracker and laser light point tracking device. With this target interception and marking system, pilots are able to search, detect, identify, and attack enemy targets remotely and accurately under harsh weather conditions.
U.S. Navy version of Google Glasses
The US Navy is now developing a head-and-wear display device similar to Google's glasses, which will be able to display real-time information from the operations Information Center in glasses.
Satellite Police
American scientists are developing a satellite surveillance technology similar to traffic police that protects the safety of drones and other military aircraft. It is understood that the satellite technology will be equipped with a system called "actionable refinement of Ephemeris", which can monitor about 500,000 pieces of space junk floating in Earth's orbit.