Eva D. Blaylock (Air Force Research Laboratory Directed Energy Directorate Public Affairs). New technology 'dazzles' aggressors, The Official Website of the U.S. Air Force, Posted November 2, 2005
Whitney, Roy; Douglas, David; Neil, George (2005). «Airborne megawatt class free-electron laser for defense and security». En Wood, Gary L, ed. Laser Source and System Technology for Defense and Security5792: 109 (s2cid: 111883401). Bibcode:2005SPIE.5792..109W. OSTI841301. doi:10.1117/12.603906.
Whitney, Roy; Douglas, David; Neil, George (2005). «Airborne megawatt class free-electron laser for defense and security». En Wood, Gary L, ed. Laser Source and System Technology for Defense and Security5792: 109 (s2cid: 111883401). Bibcode:2005SPIE.5792..109W. OSTI841301. doi:10.1117/12.603906.
Whitney, Roy; Douglas, David; Neil, George (2005). «Airborne megawatt class free-electron laser for defense and security». En Wood, Gary L, ed. Laser Source and System Technology for Defense and Security5792: 109 (s2cid: 111883401). Bibcode:2005SPIE.5792..109W. OSTI841301. doi:10.1117/12.603906.
Richard D. Fisher, Jr. (23 de febrero de 2017). «China's Progress with Directed Energy Weapons». p. 8. «A Poly video showed this laser could 'ablate' or penetrate five 2 millimeter steel plates at a range of 800 meters, and an official stated it could penetrate 5 millimeters of steel at 1,000 meters.»