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The Military United States Science

The US Navy's Railgun Program 321

RougeFive writes "Imagine a warship weapon that can launch projectiles at Mach 10 without explosives (more than three times the muzzle speed of an M16 rifle), that has a range of 220 miles and that uses the enormous speed to destroy the target by causing as much damage as a Tomahawk missile. Meet the U.S. Navy's electromagnetic railgun program."
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The US Navy's Railgun Program

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  • Is this news? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 01, 2012 @04:21PM (#41517701)
  • Old news... (Score:5, Informative)

    by Valor958 ( 2724297 ) on Monday October 01, 2012 @04:22PM (#41517717)

    In and of itself.. this article is very lacking and at face value is old news. We have been developing railguns for a long time. We have the principles down, but the problem comes with the energy needed to really run a weapons effective version.
    Even the linked article just referrences an overview of the technology and it's goals. Why not an update... did they make a breakthrough? SOMETHING...

  • Re:Old news... (Score:5, Informative)

    by EvolutionInAction ( 2623513 ) on Monday October 01, 2012 @04:41PM (#41517913)
    Unfortunately you're dead wrong. We can power them. Maybe not easily, but we can do it. The problem is that you get something like three shots before the rails have eroded to the point of uselessness. Too much friction, too much electrical arcing.
  • by Antipater ( 2053064 ) on Monday October 01, 2012 @04:55PM (#41518103)
    Railgun [wikipedia.org]

    vs. Railroad Gun [wikipedia.org]

    Really?

  • by Deadstick ( 535032 ) on Monday October 01, 2012 @05:34PM (#41518511)

    You can't put anything in orbit with any gun, acting by itself. You must apply some thrust after the projectile reaches the desired height. If you don't do that, no matter how powerful the gun is, no matter how high the muzzle velocity is, no matter where you point it, one of two things will happen: it will hit the earth before completing one orbit, or it will fly away and never come back.

    If you want to launch to orbit from a gun, you have to provide a rocket motor on the projectile that starts up at the appropriate point in the trajectory.

    Here's another way to express it: you cannot achieve a repeating orbit whose low point (perigee) is higher than the last point at which thrust was applied. For a simple gun, that point is the muzzle.

  • Re:Old news... (Score:-1, Informative)

    by SnarfQuest ( 469614 ) on Monday October 01, 2012 @05:38PM (#41518563)

    What they need is some kind of ship with a nuclear reactor that can generate enormous amounts of power.

    Now I wonder who has technology like that in the pipe?

    Obama is giving the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt billions to buy German submarines. Maybe they will have enough electrical power mount railguns. That should allow them to handle their primary stated goal of killing Jews.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 01, 2012 @06:28PM (#41519135)

    Technically that is not accurate.

    You could (theoretically) fire a ballistic projectile at an escape velocity and at such an angle that the atmosphere will slow it down to be an orbital velocity. You could also fire and use a gravitational slingshot to put an object in orbit.

    Thrust is not the only means of changing a ballistic trajectory into an orbit, both drag and gravity work as well.

    The first point here also means you cannot really have a perfect ballistic trajectory inside an atmosphere.

  • Re:Old news... (Score:4, Informative)

    by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Monday October 01, 2012 @07:11PM (#41519509)

    Things may be a little different if "gun range" is more than 100 miles

    Did you miss the part about 220 mile range?

  • Not a problem (Score:4, Informative)

    by ridgecritter ( 934252 ) on Monday October 01, 2012 @10:58PM (#41521313)

    Doing it from a ship or land based gun will give you problems because the Earth has this curvature, and your hypersonic dart is pretty much going to travel in a straight line. So things that are over the horizon are pretty much out of reach since drilling straight through the Earth is not really practical.

    These projectiles will certainly be guided (http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2012-08/its-experimental-rail-gun-navy-wants-gps-guided-hypersonic-projectiles) with accuracies at least as good as current ICBM systems, and probably as good as existing precision bombing systems like JDAM (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_Direct_Attack_Munition) and others. There are plenty of ways to guide a very fast munition that do not require sticking control surfaces out in a hypersonic air stream.

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