Red Jones, Sandia
National Laboratories: Self-guided bullet prototype can hit target a
mile away
February 1, 2012
Take two Sandia National Laboratories
engineers who are hunters, get them talking about the sport and it
shouldn’t be surprising when the conversation leads to a patented design
for a self-guided bullet that could help war fighters.
Sandia researchers Red Jones and Brian Kast and their colleagues have
invented a dart-like, self-guided bullet for small-caliber, smooth-bore
firearms that could hit laser-designated targets at distances of more
than a mile (about 2,000 meters).
A
tiny light-emitting diode, or LED, attached to a self-guided bullet at
Sandia National Laboratories shows a bright path during a nighttime
field test that proved the battery and electronics could survive the
bullet's launch. (Photo courtesy of Sandia National Laboratories)
“We have a very promising technology to guide small projectiles that
could be fully developed inexpensively and rapidly,” Jones said.
Sandia is seeking a private company partner to complete testing of the
prototype and bring a guided bullet to the marketplace.
Researchers have had initial success testing the design in computer
simulations and in field tests of prototypes, built from commercially
available parts, Jones said.
While engineering issues remain, “we’re confident in our science base
and we’re confident the engineering-technology base is there to solve
the problems,” he said.
Sandia’s design for the four-inch-long bullet includes an optical sensor
in the nose to detect a laser beam on a target. The sensor sends
information to guidance and control electronics that use an algorithm in
an eight-bit central processing unit to command electromagnetic
actuators. These actuators steer tiny fins that guide the bullet to the
target.
Most bullets shot from rifles, which have grooves, or rifling, that
cause them to spin so they fly straight, like a long football pass. To
enable a bullet to turn in flight toward a target and to simplify the
design, the spin had to go, Jones said.
The bullet flies straight due to its aerodynamically stable design,
which consists of a center of gravity that sits forward in the
projectile and tiny fins that enable it to fly without spin, just as a
dart does, he said.
The
four-inch-long bullet has actuators that steer tiny fins that guide it
to its target. (Photo by Randy Montoya)
Computer aerodynamic modeling shows the design would result in dramatic
improvements in accuracy, Jones said. Computer simulations showed an
unguided bullet under real-world conditions could miss a target more
than a half mile away (1,000 meters away) by 9.8 yards (9 meters), but a
guided bullet would get within 8 inches (0.2 meters), according to the
patent.
Plastic sabots provide a gas seal in the cartridge and protect the
delicate fins until they drop off after the bullet emerges from the
firearm’s barrel.
The prototype does not require a device found in guided missiles called
an inertial measuring unit, which would have added substantially to its
cost. Instead, the researchers found that the bullet’s relatively small
size when compared to guided missiles “is helping us all around. It’s
kind of a fortuitous thing that none of us saw when we started,” Jones
said.
As the bullet flies through the air, it pitches and yaws at a set rate
based on its mass and size. In larger guided missiles, the rate of
flight-path corrections is relatively slow, so each correction needs to
be very precise because fewer corrections are possible during flight.
But “the natural body frequency of this bullet is about 30 hertz, so we
can make corrections 30 times per second. That means we can overcorrect,
so we don’t have to be as precise each time,” Jones said.
Testing has shown the electromagnetic actuator performs well and the
bullet can reach speeds of 2,400 feet per second, or Mach 2.1, using
commercially available gunpowder. The researchers are confident it could
reach standard military speeds using customized gunpowder.
And a nighttime field test, in which a tiny light-emitting diode, or
LED, was attached to the bullet showed the battery and electronics can
survive flight, Jones said.
Researchers
also filmed high-speed video of the bullet radically pitching as it
exited the barrel. The bullet pitches less as it flies down range, a
phenomenon known to long-range firearms experts as “going to sleep.”
Because the bullet’s motions settle the longer it is in flight, accuracy
improves at longer ranges, Jones said.
“Nobody had ever seen that, but we’ve got high-speed video photography
that shows that it’s true,” he said.
Potential customers for the bullet include the military, law enforcement
and recreational shooters.
In addition to Jones and Kast, Sandia researchers who helped develop the
technology are: engineer Brandon R. Rohrer, aerodynamics expert Marc W.
Kniskern, mechanical designer Scott E. Rose, firearms expert James W.
Woods and Ronald W. Greene, a guidance, control and simulation engineer.