New photos appear to show the railgun perched on the bow of a Type 072III-class landing ship at sea By Jared Keller Posted on Dec 29, 2018 7:24 PM EST China’s futuristic electromagnetic railgun ...
Recent reports indicate that the Chinese Navy has unveiled a revolutionary electromagnetic railgun capable of launching projectiles at hypersonic speeds, using advanced electromagnetic technology.
Japan says it successfully test fired its medium-caliber maritime electromagnetic railgun via an offshore platform. According to its Acquisition Technology & Logistics Agency (ATLA), this was the ...
The U.S. Navy quietly test-fired 20 supersonic shells originally intended for the service's futuristic electromagnetic railgun from the conventional deck guns during an international military ...
He built this railgun capable of firing aluminum projectiles ... to be the year that all danger seekers are busting out their electromagnetic projection flingers.
Objective: construct and fire a rail gun. Definition: a linear electromagnetic accelerator consisting of two rails and an armature in which the large amounts of current are passed through the rails to ...
This is a photograph taken from a high-speed video camera during a record-setting firing of an electromagnetic railgun (EMRG) at Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren, Va., on Jan. 31 ...
Medium voltage (about 12000 volt) DC power distribution that is reliable and affordable is the key to having the power for futuristic technology like railguns and electromagnetic launchers. China ...
The US Navy has decided to shelve the research and development of an electromagnetic railgun to build other weapons, such as hypersonic missiles and lasers, the Associated Press reported ...
Arrowhead can make RS-422 Railgun the best weapon in Helldivers 2 by making this one modification to the weapon.
Philip Morrison and Guiseppe Cocconi analyzed how two civilizations separated by many light years of space might use electromagnetic radiation to communicate. Electromagnetic radiation is the general ...
Researchers at ETH Zurich have managed to make sound waves travel only in one direction. In the future, this method could also be used in technical applications with electromagnetic waves.