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US/UK collaboration on PRA models for military laser safety analysis

Authors :
Paul K. Kennedy
Peter A. Smith
Tom Riley
Robert J. Thomas
Daniel F. Huantes
Brian K. Flemming
Source :
International Laser Safety Conference.
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Laser Institute of America, 2005.

Abstract

Since Nov. 2001, the Optical Radiation Branch of the US Air Force Research Lab and the UK Military Laser Safety Committee have been collaborating on development of military laser safety models which use Probabilistic Risk Assessment (PRA) techniques. This collaboration was partly motivated by recent US development of military High Energy Laser systems, which require probabilistic analysis in order to properly assess the potential risks posed by testing and deployment. The US wishes to leverage UK expertise in this area, with the goal of producing a common probabilistic laser safety tool to meet future US/UK needs. The US has recently made a proposal for an expanded collaboration, in which an existing piece of USAF software, the LRMS/PRA Concept Demonstrator, will be used as a platform to host UK PRA mathematical models. The new code would be jointly owned and would be the common US/UK tool for performing military laser safety analyses.Since Nov. 2001, the Optical Radiation Branch of the US Air Force Research Lab and the UK Military Laser Safety Committee have been collaborating on development of military laser safety models which use Probabilistic Risk Assessment (PRA) techniques. This collaboration was partly motivated by recent US development of military High Energy Laser systems, which require probabilistic analysis in order to properly assess the potential risks posed by testing and deployment. The US wishes to leverage UK expertise in this area, with the goal of producing a common probabilistic laser safety tool to meet future US/UK needs. The US has recently made a proposal for an expanded collaboration, in which an existing piece of USAF software, the LRMS/PRA Concept Demonstrator, will be used as a platform to host UK PRA mathematical models. The new code would be jointly owned and would be the common US/UK tool for performing military laser safety analyses.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Laser Safety Conference
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2881f3de73c705d1eaa3b335954ed48e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2351/1.5056593