viernes, 1 de febrero de 2008

“EM railgun” o cañón electromagnético.






La Marina de los EEUU difundió ayer videos de las pruebas de su nueva arma de Ciencia Ficción, el “EM railgun” o cañón electromagnético. Este proyectil utiliza pulsos electromagnéticos en lugar de pólvora para dispararse, lo que le permite alcanzar la brutal velocidad de 5.640 millas por hora: exactamente 2.521,30 metros / segundo.

El misil fue probado ayer en el Naval Surface Warfare Center (Centro de guerra naval de superficie) in Dahlgren, Virginia. Algunos comentaristas llegaron a afirmar que el video era falso, pues un misil electromagnético no debería producir una explosión. Sin embargo, la explicación que leímos en varias oportunidades fue ésta: “A esa velocidad y temperatura prácticamente todo es combustible, por lo que el aire se enciende en llamas”.





¿Habrá razones para aterrorizarnos? No hasta el 2020 o 2025, que es cuando piensan tener las primeras versiones funcionales del arma para instalar en embarcaciones de guerra. Dice el Navy Times:

Funcionarios dijeron que un cañón electromagnético a bordo de un barco podrá ampliar las opciones de diseño de los barcos pues pesan menos y requieren menos infraestructura que los cañones tradicionales que usan pólvora y cartuchos.

La protección contra incendios y requerimientos de manejo de munición se hacen innecesarios al usar un sistema electromagnético de pulsaciones, dijo Ellis.

El resultado sería un arma altamente letal y más costo-efectiva (…)

La Marina pretende tener un cañón electromagnético a bordo de una embarción, probablemente la próxima generación de los cruceros CG(X) entre 2020 y 2025.

Los Marines están particularmente interesados en el cañón electromagnético porque podría proveer poder de fuego marítimo de alta velocidad y sobre el horizonte.

Navy Times, via Gizmodo


‘Record’ rail gun test today


The Navy plans a “record-breaking” test shot of its developmental electromagnetic railgun Thursday at the Naval Surface Warfare Center in Dahlgren, Va.

The gun fires a projectile with electricity, rather than gunpowder. A shell is launched at Mach 7 through the electromagnetic rails into the atmosphere for about one minute, flies out of the atmosphere for four minutes, and then descends to Earth toward its target at Mach 5 in approximately one minute. The projectile is guided using the Global Positioning System.

In November, defense contractor BAE Systems delivered a 32-megajoule laboratory gun and launcher to the Naval Surface Warfare Center in Dahlgren. A joule is the work needed to produce one watt of energy for one second — a megajoule is 1 million joules. Eventually, the Navy wants to produce a 64-megajoule railgun that will be able to hit targets on land from over 200 nautical miles away.

The test firing Thursday will expend far less energy than the lab gun is designed to handle, but will exceed the eight megajoule output attained in a previous test.

“More than 75 [railgun] firings have occurred at the Dahlgren facility this year, but this firing event is the next step forward in the development of this technology as the gun will be fired at over 10 [megajoules] of energy — a power level never before achieved by an [railgun],” according to a statement by the Office of Naval Research.

The previous record of 9 megajoules is held by the Center for Electromagnetic Materials and Devices at the University of Texas, according to ONR. The Institute for Advanced Technology, also at the university, certifies electromagnetic railgun launches.

As the Navy gun is tested, the amount of energy the gun uses is being increased, Roger Ellis, the EM railgun deputy program manager for ONR, told Navy Times in August 2007.

The program wants to demonstrate more than 100 shots by fiscal 2011. The objective is to fire 3,000 rounds per gun barrel. The barrels should be changeable onboard ship, according to program officials.

Officials say an EM railgun onboard a ship could increase ship design options because the gun weighs less and requires less infrastructure than traditional guns that use gunpowder and magazines.

Traditional fire-protection and ammunition-handling requirements are not necessary using an electromagnetic-pulse power system, Ellis said.

The end result could be a more cost-effective and highly lethal weapon, program manager Elizabeth D’Andrea said at an industry conference in August, adding that the railgun program strives to provide “missile ranges at bullet prices.”

The Navy plans to have an EM railgun onboard a ship, potentially its next-generation cruiser CG(X), between 2020 and 2025.

The Marine Corps is particularly interested in the EM railgun because it could provide high-speed, over-the-horizon fire support from the sea.

By Zachary M. Peterson - Staff writer

http://www.navytimes.com/news/2008/01/navy_railgun_test_080129w/

http://www.noticias24.com/tecnologia/?p=633

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