Navy shooting for new world record with test of railgun prototype.
For now, the power of what may prove to be the Navy's most formidable  weapon is confined to a research and development lab at the Dahlgren  base in King George County.
 On Friday, the Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division and  BAE Systems will take another step in an ongoing quest to put  electromagnetic railguns on ships in the fleet.
 About 1 p.m., Navy brass, civilian engineers, contractors and  reporters will watch a video feed of a projectile--traveling five times  the speed of sound--smashing into a steel box filled with sand.
Until recently, a railgun has been a fantasy weapon for video gamers, the stuff of science fiction.
 But the technology has been slowly moving toward reality.
 The railgun works by a pulse of electricity traveling along two parallel rails to propel a projectile at tremendous speed.
 Friday's shot, expected to use 32 megajoules of electromagnetic  energy, is by far the most powerful to date. It will take only a  fraction of a second, as long as the blink of an eye. It is expected to  establish a new world record in the annals of electromagnetic  acceleration.
 The goal is to show the tactical relevance of the technology, the Navy said in a press release.
 "The importance of the 32-megajoule demonstration is the feasibility  of the system at an energy level that has military significance," said  Roger Ellis, electromagnetic railgun program manager for the Office of  Naval Research. 
 A megajoule is a measurement of energy associated with an object  traveling at a certain speed. For example, a vehicle weighing a ton,  moving at 100 mph, equals a megajoule of energy.
 The Navy would like to have a fully functional 64-megajoule system aboard a ship by 2025.
   A shot of that power could reach a target 100 nautical miles away  in a matter of minutes. The projectile would travel so fast that no  warhead is needed;  kinetic energy is sufficient to destroy its target.
   Another advantage is that it is safer for sailors because it uses no explosives.
 There are formidable technological challenges. The gun requires huge  amounts of electrical power and must be scaled down to fit on ships.
 The first test shot was in 2006. Then, in January 2008, a prototype at Dahlgren achieved a shot of 10.6 megajoules, a record.
 BAE Systems, a national  defense contractor with an office in Stafford County, was awarded a $21 million contract last year to develop the railgun prototype.
NSWC Dahlgren Division is the largest tenant command of the Naval Support Facility Dahlgren.



