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  2. Railgun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railgun

    The fireball is a result of pieces of the projectile shearing off during launch and igniting mid-air. [1] A railgun or rail gun, sometimes referred to as a rail cannon, is a linear motor device, typically designed as a weapon, that uses electromagnetic force to launch high- velocity projectiles.

  3. Electro-Magnetic Laboratory Rail Gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electro-Magnetic...

    The Electro-Magnetic Laboratory Rail Gun is a long-range naval weapon that fires projectiles using electricity instead of chemical propellants. Magnetic fields created by high electrical currents accelerate a sliding metal conductor, or armature, between two rails to launch projectiles at 4,500 mph to 5,600 mph. Electricity generated by the ...

  4. Plasma railgun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_railgun

    Plasma railgun. A plasma railgun is a linear accelerator which, like a projectile railgun, uses two long parallel electrodes to accelerate a "sliding short" armature. However, in a plasma railgun, the armature and ejected projectile consists of plasma, or hot, ionized, gas-like particles, instead of a solid slug of material.

  5. Coilgun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coilgun

    A coilgun is a type of mass driver consisting of one or more coils used as electromagnets in the configuration of a linear motor that accelerate a ferromagnetic or conducting projectile to high velocity. [1] In almost all coilgun configurations, the coils and the gun barrel are arranged on a common axis. A coilgun is not a rifle as the barrel ...

  6. Railway gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_gun

    The design of a railway gun has three firing issues over and above those of an ordinary artillery piece to consider. Namely how the gun is going to be traversed – i.e. moved from side to side to aim; how the horizontal component of the recoil force will be absorbed by the gun's carriage and how the vertical recoil force will be absorbed by the ground.

  7. Helical railgun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helical_railgun

    The helical railgun is a cross between a railgun and a coilgun. They do not currently exist in a practical, usable form. A helical railgun was built at MIT in 1980 and was powered by several banks of, for the time, large capacitors (approximately 4 farads). It was about 3 meters long, consisting of 2 meters of accelerating coil and 1 meter of ...

  8. Cannon-Caliber Electromagnetic Gun launcher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannon-Caliber...

    Description. The CCEMG launcher (version III) was a series augmented railgun capable of firing three five-round salvos of 185-g launch packages at a velocity of 1,850 m/s with a firing rate of 5 Hz. It was a 2.25 m long, water-glycol cooled launcher with a 30 mm rectangular bore and achieved rapid fire operation with the help of a CCEMG ...

  9. John P. Barber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_P._Barber

    John P. Barber is a pioneer of railgun technology. Dr. Barber received the Bachelor of Science degree in Engineering Physics from the University of Saskatchewan in 1967 and his Ph.D. in Engineering Physics from Australian National University in 1972. He joined the University of Dayton Research Institute in 1974 and directed the Impact Physics ...