The Kali is a particle accelerator. It emits powerful pulses of electrons. Other components in the machine down the line convert the electron energy into EM Radiation, which can be adjusted to x-ray or microwave frequencies. This has fueled hopes that the KALI could, one day be used in a High-Power Microwave gun, which could destroy incoming missiles and aircraft through soft-kill. However, weaponising such a system has many obstacles to overcome.
History
The project was first Founded by Dr. P.H. Ron, and mooted in 1985 by the then Director of the BARC, Dr. R. Chidambaram. Work on the Project began in 1989, being developed by the Accelerators & Pulse Power Division of the BARC.. DRDO is also involved with this project. It was initially developed for industrial applications, although defence applications became clearer later. The first accelerators had a power of ~0.4GW, which increased as later versions were developed. These were the KALI 80, KALI 200, KALI 1000, KALI 5000 and KALI 10000. The KALI-5000 was commissioned for use in late 2004.
Applications
The KALI has been put to various uses by the DRDO. The DRDO was involved in configuring the KALI for their use. The X-rays emitted are being used in Ballistics research as an illuminator for ultrahigh speed photography by the Terminal BallisticsResearch Institute in Chandigarh. The Microwave emissions are used for EM Research. The microwave-producing version of KALI has also been used by the DRDO scientists for testing the vulnerability of the electronic systems of the Light Combat Aircraft, which was then under development. It has also helped in designing electrostatic shields to "harden" the LCA and missiles from microwave attack by the enemy as well as protecting satellites against deadly Electromagnetic Impulses generated by nuclear weapons and other cosmic disturbances, which "fry" and destroy electronic circuits. Electronic components currently used in missiles can withstand fields of approx. 300 V/cm, while the fields in case of EMI attack reach thousands of V/cm.
As a Weapon
Weaponisation of the KALI will take some time. The system is still under development, and efforts are being made to make it more compact as well as improve its recharge time, which, at the present, makes it only a single use system. There are also issues with creating a complete system, which would require development of many more components. There have been reports of placing the weaponized KALI in an Il-76 aircraft as an airborne defence system. In the early version of 'Kali', one gigabyte of electromagnetic waves per nano second was hit. But until the last , the latest form of 'Kali' emits up to 40 gigawatts of energy waves in 100 milliseconds. Which can destroy the enemy's biggest and sophisticated weapons in a moment.