DocumentCode
3296015
Title
A comparison of co-energy and lorenz force based simulations of rail guns
Author
Hodge, C.G. ; Flower, J.O. ; Macalindin, A.
Author_Institution
BMT Defence Services Ltd., Bath
fYear
2009
fDate
20-22 April 2009
Firstpage
157
Lastpage
164
Abstract
Rail guns are serious contenders for future naval weapon systems because of their ability to overcome the speed limitations of chemically propelled shells. Muzzle velocities in excess of 2km/s are achievable by rail guns and this provides ranges far in excess of current capability. In addition this speed allows the kinetic energy of around 60 MJ alone to provide the destructive effect. The absence of high energy explosive in the warhead also simplifies ship design by the removal of the need for magazines. However such performance requires, for a 20 kg projectile, very large amounts of stored electrical power, perhaps in excess of 200 MJ, together with an allocation of up to 20 MW steady power generation to sustain a firing rate of 6 rounds per minute. A previous paper used a co-energy analysis to explore the ship integration issues such as heat management and rail stresses arising from the operation of a rail gun. This paper extends the granularity of the physical simulation of the rail gun´s operation by using a finite element approach based on Ampere´s law of magnetic induction and compares its results to those of the original co-energy analysis.
Keywords
electromagnetic induction; finite element analysis; naval engineering; projectiles; railguns; Ampere law; Lorenz force; chemically propelled shells; co-energy analysis; electrical power; finite element approach; heat management; kinetic energy; magnetic induction; muzzle velocities; naval weapon systems; projectile; rail guns; rail stress; ship design; Chemicals; Explosives; Guns; Kinetic energy; Magnetic analysis; Marine vehicles; Projectiles; Propulsion; Rails; Weapons;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electric Ship Technologies Symposium, 2009. ESTS 2009. IEEE
Conference_Location
Baltimore, MD
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3438-1
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-3439-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ESTS.2009.4906509
Filename
4906509
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