Magneto Hydrodynamic Explosive
Munition (MAHEM)
For 99 years, armored tanks have been a part of modern
battlefields, shrugging off bullet fire and sending footsoldiers
running for cover. The development of anti-tank weapons is almost as old, with
people struggling to create new tactics and new weapons that can stop the
lumbering warmachines. Countries especially want anti-tank weapons light enough
to be carried by a single person into battle, but powerful enough to punch
through modern tank armor. For years, DARPA's been quietly working on a human-portable
anti-tank railgun.
And now, it appears,
China's working on one too.
Here's how
DARPA describes their MAgnetoHydrodynamic Explosive Munition (MAHEM) railgun:
Explosively
formed jets (EFJ) and fragments and self-forging penetrators (SFP) are used for
precision strike against targets such as armored vehicles and reinforced
structures. Current technology uses chemical explosive energy to form the jets
and fragments. This is highly inefficient and requires precise machining of the
metal liners from which the fragments and jets are formed. The Magneto
Hydrodynamic Explosive Munition (MAHEM) program offers the potential for higher
efficiency, greater control, and the ability to generate and accurately time
multiple jets and fragments from a single charge.
The MAHEM
program will demonstrate compressed magnetic flux generator (CMFG)-driven
magneto hydrodynamically formed metal jets and SFP with significantly improved
performance over EFJ. Generating multiple jets or fragments from a single
explosive is difficult, and the timing of the multiple jets or fragments cannot
be controlled. MAHEM offers the potential for multiple targeted warheads with a
much higher EFJ velocity, than conventional EFJ/SFP. This will increase
lethality precision. MAHEM could also be packaged into a missile, projectile or
other platform, and delivered close to target for final engagement.
Essentially,
the weapon will use electricity to bend metal into the specific deadly form
needed as it's fired. If built, a person firing the weapon could adapt their
attacks if the vehicle they're attacking survived one type of shot. Beyond
that, details of the weapon in American publications are sparse, but David Hambling
at Popular Mechanics appears to have found a paper by Chinese
researchers that details a very similar weapon. He reports:
For $28, I
downloaded a scientific paper entitled "Physical Modeling of Magneto
Hydrodynamic Explosive Munition and Detonation Control" from the journal
Applied Mechanics and Materials. The paper was written by a team at the
"ministerial key laboratory" at the Nanjing University of Science and
Technology, and is a detailed theoretical breakdown of how MAHEM works. It
includes block diagrams of the electronics, the complex "kinematics
differential equations of kill element" that indicates how it accelerates
metal projectiles, and details of the ferroelectric ceramics in the flux
generator. This is more information than you can get from any US source, and
appears to be based on the reverse-engineering MAHEM by a team with a very
detailed knowledge of magnetohydrodynamics and muntions. ‘Popular Science’
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