Title : 
Experiments with brush armatures: new technical solutions
         
        
            Author : 
Schneider, M. ; Schneider, R. ; Eckenfels, D.
         
        
            Author_Institution : 
French-German Res. Inst., Saint-Louis, France
         
        
        
        
        
        
            Abstract : 
This paper presents experimental solutions developed recently at the ISL railgun facility EMA3 (muzzle velocity v0 < 1900 m/s, applied energy per shot Eprim < 0.9 MJ, I=3 m, cal.=15×30 mm2). New quasi-segmented rail configurations: one advantage of multiple brush armatures is the possibility of developing new armature-rail configurations, which vary the width of the rail as a function of the rail length in order to maximize the multiple brush armature performance. Improved Doppler radar measurements of the projectile dynamics in the launcher: the overall performance of a Doppler system might be limited by the decrease of the signal-to-noise ratio due to the formation of plasma arcs during the shot. A new approach, circumventing this problem, is presented. Parasitic mass is considered as a key problem of railgun technology in general, and of the use of brush armatures in particular. A new idea using the force behavior of multiple brush armatures is presented. Whereas X-ray flash radiographs provide useful information about the force distribution between multiple brushes, the measurement of the current distribution is more difficult. A method to measure the latter by benefiting from the discontinuity of the armatures is presented.
         
        
            Keywords : 
Doppler radar; brushes; electric current measurement; railguns; Doppler radar measurements; X-ray flash radiographs; current distribution measurement; launcher; metrology; multiple brush armatures; muzzle velocity; parasitic mass; plasma arcs; projectile dynamics; quasisegmented rail configurations; railgun; signal-to-noise ratio; Brushes; Doppler radar; Force measurement; Plasma measurements; Plasma x-ray sources; Projectiles; Radiography; Railguns; Rails; Signal to noise ratio;
         
        
        
        
            Conference_Titel : 
Electromagnetic Launch Technology, 2004. 2004 12th Symposium on
         
        
            Print_ISBN : 
0-7803-8290-0
         
        
        
            DOI : 
10.1109/ELT.2004.1398057