Posted on 03/20/2012 9:44:57 PM PDT by U-238
Ubiquitous in science fiction, rail guns are a hot area of military research in real life too. But will we ever really get to use them the way people in science fiction do? And could rail guns be used for a non-violent reason inexpensively launching payload into space?
Halo Reach ends with your Spartan taking up a mounted rail gun to destroy an incoming Covenant ship. Rail guns are the basis for a funny aside in Mass Effect 2. They're used in Babylon 5 and Stargate Atlantis and The Last Starfighter. And they're a devastating hand-held weapon in the Metal Gear Solid and Quake series. Now, let's discover the real science behind rail guns. Ejecting pieces of metal at phenomenal velocities The initial theory leading to modern rail guns owes itself to Louis Octave Fauchon-Villeplee, an early 20th Century French scientist who was awarded the patent, Electric Apparatus for Propelling Projectiles. The patent proposed passing current through two strips of aluminum, with an induced force pushing a metal block forward.
Modern rail guns typically make use of two metal rails, a movable armature, and a power supply. Current passes from a positive conducting rail, over the armature, and to a negative conducting rail, creating a magnetic field in the process that sends a projectile resting on or within the armature forward. Laboratory conditions produced velocities of up to 9 kilometers per second using small mass projectiles; nearing the velocity needed for an object on the surface of the planet to escape the gravitational pull of Earth.
(Excerpt) Read more at io9.com ...
Eventually.
I wouldnt be at all surprised if the first few examples were worse than useless.
Every new technology suffers from a certain amount of failure when it first enters the wilds of the real world.
Considering the messiness of the battle field it is hard to imagine the first battle tested electric battle rifle being an unalloyed success. Water, sand, mud, ice all are enemies of electrical equipment and all are found on the battle field. But given time and the ingenuity of Americans they will be defeated and the American soldier will have a rail gun battle rifle.
That is a violation of the law of conservation of momentum. True, there are forces acting sideways trying to bend the rails out, but there is a force trying to shorten the rails, as well. The gun cannot push the projectile forward without the projectile pushing back on something.
This is not like RPG where the projectile has a rocket driving it forward unless you have vaporized metal moving in the opposite direction as the projectile.
So we’re probably looking at a rifle with a really big extension cord going to a portable nuke plant?
where did they use a rail gun in Babylon 5?
>It may take high current room temperature superconductors to make a rail gun battle rifle a reality.
If you can pull this off, you’ve also solved the power source issue. You can use a superconducting loop as a form of ‘battery’ or maybe capacitor might be a more appropriate term.
———rail guns are a hot area of military research -——
Translation....... sacred cow
Rail gun research should be abandoned and unused obligated funds returned to the treasury. Rail guns are a boondoggle that has lived on and on and failure after failure to actually produce.
Ghostbusters Proton Pack Backpack ?
When the Centauri were bombarding the Narn homeworld. (Although they were called mass drivers...)
Yes, I'm a sci-fi geek. :-)
Cool article.
“Ubiquitous in science fiction...”
Not one example from a book..? Man I really am behind the times! When someone says “science fiction,” books are the first thing I think about, not movies, TV or video games.
Freegards
Substitute the Airborne Laser (which mercifully has finally been cancled) for "rail gun" and the above is actually true.
I came on this thread expecting something about Big Bertha and here you all are talking about electrical dooflackies.
got it, thanx. i remember g’kar was not pleased. neither was sheridan.
Well, obviously it doesn’t violate conservation of momentum, it’s just that the device is designed to transfer the momentum in such a way that you don’t see the classic backwards recoil.
Awright, which one of you cappin' rookies forgot to put Keith Laumer's Bolo novels on the list? [Not only railguns as Bolo *Hellbore* main gun armament, but *smart* guns at that....]
Awright, which one of you cappin' rookies forgot to put Keith Laumer's Bolo novels on the list? [Not only railguns as Bolo *Hellbore* main gun armament, but *smart* guns at that....]
The immediate problem is that the relatively immense power source involved for powering the weapon would be immediately detectable by sensors, negating the sniper's stealth advantage. That's already becoming a problem in sniperville with conventional small arms, hence the proliferation of suppressor/silencer mounts on sniper rifles.
Will we return to the crossbow as a sniper tool? A kinetin-energy launched silent weapon with a terminally guided fire-and-forget projectile, with the effect of a 40mm M203 or GP-30 grenade once it gets there? Stay tuned.
My weapons of choice were an will always be a M79 and a TRW built M1A . Those were my eras fire an forget tools. Albeit a love for the M82A1 Barrett an raufaus recipe fodder did exist the last few years of my career.....
Rail guns ...... Phft....
Rail guns ...... Phft....
Happy news for you: on one range I frequent, the 800-meter targets are two-foot long sections of railroad rail. painted orange and hanging from a short section of chain. And at least twice I've let fly at them with an M82A1/ M107A1, which punches right through if it hits on the bottom web of the rail. IS a rail gun....You have to have on to be with it in this Twenty-First Century....
Nor the one Mycroft used for Moon-to-Earth bombardment in Heinlein's The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress. Somebody oughta make a movie....
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