Abstract
An inductive coil gun is a solenoid surrounding a cylindrical metallic armature (the projectile), both electromagnetically coupled. One or more capacitors discharge a stored voltage quickly through the coil, configuring a kind of RLC circuit, with the pulse-shaped current generating a magnetic field inside the coil that accelerates the projectile. Once the projectile crosses an equilibrium point inside the coil, the existing magnetic field pulls the armature back, therefore reducing the final muzzle velocity and decreasing the efficiency-defined as the ratio between the available capacitor electrostatic versus the slug kinetic energies. This paper describes a system that monitors the armature position inside the coil, with a laser beam, and automatically cuts the current when the projectile reaches the equilibrium point. The system, named current switch circuit, enables higher velocities using the same set of coilgun and projectiles, providing a higher efficiency.
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