Explore how laser technology is disrupting the economics of warfare. We analyze the technical hurdles, the race for drone-swarm defense, and the specific defense stocks best positioned to lead this high-stakes market.

If you’re using a Patriot missile that costs over five million dollars to intercept a thirty-thousand-dollar drone, you’re losing the war of attrition before it even starts. With a high-energy laser, your 'bullets' are just photons, shifting the strategic math back in favor of the defender.
The primary driver is the dramatic shift in the "cost per kill" ratio. Traditional interceptors, such as those used in the Iron Dome, can cost up to $100,000 per shot, while a Patriot missile can cost over $5 million. In contrast, a laser strike costs between two and five dollars. This allows defenders to counter inexpensive drones—which may only cost $20,000 to $50,000—without losing a war of attrition through unsustainable spending.
Lasers face significant environmental and physical hurdles, most notably weather conditions. Because lasers are composed of light, their beams can be scattered or defocused by fog, rain, smoke, and dust. Additionally, "thermal blooming" occurs when a laser heats the air it passes through, causing the beam to spread out. Furthermore, these systems require massive amounts of power and complex cooling systems to manage the waste heat generated during operation, making them difficult to mount on smaller vehicles.
A "burner" is a high-energy laser designed to physically destroy a target through thermal energy, melting the aircraft skin or causing composite materials to delaminate. A "dazzler," such as the Navy’s ODIN system, is a lower-power beam intended to "blind" the threat. Instead of destroying the drone, it shines light into the target's sensors or cameras to confuse its guidance system and neutralize the threat without an explosion.
Intercepting a cruise missile requires significantly more power—typically 300 kilowatts or more—compared to the power needed for drones. To be effective, the system must maintain a perfectly still beam on a specific spot of the fast-moving target for several seconds to burn through. Companies like Lockheed Martin are developing advanced beam directors and scaling fiber laser technology to reach these higher power levels and achieve the precision necessary to track maneuvering targets.
The "Big Three" U.S. leaders are Lockheed Martin, RTX (formerly Raytheon), and Boeing. Lockheed Martin has already installed the HELIOS system on a Navy destroyer, while Raytheon has deployed mobile systems to the Air Force. Internationally, Rafael Advanced Defense Systems in Israel is developing the "Iron Beam" to complement the Iron Dome. Additionally, specialist firms like nLight and IPG Photonics provide the essential fiber optics and components that power these systems.
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