A program is proposed to evaluate the feasibility of developing a forty-pound compact lidar system based on a unique lsi laser design. The goal is a system having four frequency agile coaxially aligned co2 laser beams with an energy output of at least 100 mj, a prf of 100 hz, and tunability to 66 lines at a tuning rate of 100 hz. The system should use nine inch collecting optics, state-of-the-art detectors, have a sealed laser life of 10 million pulses, operate on a 28 volt power supply and provide buffered 16 bit digital data (ttl logic), using an a/d rate of 20 mhz, storing 4k words of data for each laser shot. The most important aspect of the phase i feasibility study will be to demonstrate that a lightweight laser head can be built which meets the pulse energy and pulse rate requirements, that a lightweight agile system can be developed, and that technology is available to develop a lightweight receiver and data handling system. Each major component of the system will be addressed through a combination of feasibility demonstration, analysis and design studied. Various packaging concepts will be considered to select a conceptual design and estimates will be made of weight, size and performance. This design will form the basis for a phase ii program to develop and test a system.