The U.S. Navy is preparing new tests for a futuristic weapon: an electromagnetic railgun that could fire shots at seven times the speed of sound.
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Navy officials announced this month they plan to install and test a prototype of the railgun aboard a joint high-speed vessel in 2016, marking the first time this technology will be put through its paces at sea.
Instead of relying on explosive propellants, the railgun harnesses electromagnetic energy to accelerate and launch a projectile between two conductive rails. An operational railgun at sea would be able to deliver a lethal blow from 110 nautical miles (185 kilometers) away, striking targets that range from enemy warships and aircraft to small boats and missiles, Navy officials said.
This capability will allow us to effectively counter a wide range of threats at a relatively low cost, while keeping our ships and sailors safer by removing the need to carry as many high-explosive weapons," Rear Adm. Bryant Fuller, the Navy's chief engineer, said in a statement.
The Navy has been testing this powerful gun on land for nearly a decade. In one landmark trial at the Naval Surface Warfare Center in Dahlgren, Va., in 2010, the military fired a 33-megajoule electromagnetic railgun shot. That's roughly equivalent to the energy required to toss 33 cars each weighing 1 ton (0.9 tonnes) at 100 mph (160 km/h).
The Navy has not yet determined which ship classes will receive a railgun when the technology becomes operational. Joint high-speed vessels are typically used to transport cargo and soldiers. They are not used in combat, and Navy officials say they have no plan to permanently install a railgun on any ship of that class. ■
A strong storm that originated over the Pacific has tracked through the Great Basin and is currently transitioning across the Rockies to redevelop across the central High Plains later today into early Saturday morning.