Israeli Company Creates Nano-Armor 416
Izeickl writes "According to IsraCast, an Israeli company has created materials made of inorganic fullerene-like nanostructures (IFs) which have amazing shock absorbing properties. During preliminary tests, these materials, which are five times stronger than steel, have successfully resisted to steel projectiles generating pressures as high as 250 tons per square centimeter. These materials could be incorporated in "nanoarmors" able to protect soldiers or police forces within three years."
Getting your point across. (Score:3, Interesting)
How about teflon-coated bullets? Or armor-piercing shells?
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2)
Your point about velocity is taken, though, since delivering the same number of Joules in less time can make a difference i
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:3, Informative)
An often-overlooked point about ballistics. How quickly and efficiently the projectile's energy is transferred into the target is a huge determining factor in how damaging it is. If you shoot someone with a
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:5, Funny)
Sir, I suggest you Trademark that phrase and enter Bullet Manufacturing.
Wouldn't work. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2)
Among other things, yes. The number of variables that influence the behavior of firearms and projectiles is just astounding--it's a HELL of a lot more than caliber, which is usually all the most people think of. There's a reason why ballistics research has its own scholarly journals.
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:5, Informative)
As a physics major, let me explain my understanding of firearms:
I believe the bullets would (all else being equal) receive the same kinetic energy (1/2*m*v^2), so if the bullet was half the mass, it would go sqrt(2) times as fast. At least at the end of the muzzle. After that (and to a lesser extent, before) air resistance affects the bullet proportional to v^2. Since v^2 is twice as large for the smaller bullett, the force would be twice as large, and due to the lower mass, the lighter bullet would decelerate much quicker (starting at 4x). This is a rather complex differential equation (because of the square), but what's likely to happen is that at any large distance, the lighter bullett will probably hit the target moving slower.
Now, when the bullet impacts the target I believe it's the pressure that actually does the damage. Pressure is force per unit area, and the areas would be the same (although here the analysis could possibly fail, if the lighter bullet held a pointier shape for longer). At point-blank range (or ignoring air resistance) and treating the force the target exerts as spring-like (probably good approximation for armor), the force needed to stop the bullets would be the same on each bullet (because the energy is the same so they would deform the target the same amount). Factoring air resistance back in, the lighter bullet will reach the target with less energy, and so exert less pressure. If the lighter bullet doesn't deform, it's possible that the pressure would be greater, dealing more damage.
Conclusions:
1. A lighter bullet will hit the target at a slower velocity.
2. Assuming the same deformation upon impact, the lighter bullet will deal less damage.
3. If the heavy bullet deforms and the light doesn't, the light one *might* do more damage.
This is my best guess, but it's possible I made a mistake somewhere.
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:4, Informative)
You're right about lighter bullets losing velocity faster, of course, but it's not as much a determinant as you might think -- consider the difference between a 7mm rifle round, which is a mid-sized hunting round, and a
Now, all that being said, deformation on hitting the target is a good thing. (Er, good from the shooter's POV, not the target's
* Forget all that crap you hear about "cavitation" and "small hole going in, big hole coming out." It's a myth, based on studies of firing bullets into blocks of gelatin which do not behave, in the least, like human (or animal) bodies. If you're looking for a weapon for self-defense, you will always be better off with a bigger bullet, as long as you can handle the weapon. Period. And big slow bullets (e.g.,
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2, Insightful)
At the same velocity, two bullets of the same size/shape have the same drag on them due to air regardless of mass. Drag increases by the square of the velocity.
No matter what the mass of the bullet, the gun is going to impart the same force onto it. As you stated, a = f/m and so the lighter bullet will end up experiencing more drag than a heavier bullet (due to drag increasing as v^2).
However, E = mv^2 / 2, and a heavier bullet will gain less velocity in general
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2, Informative)
Rifle bullets are the interesting problem (Score:2)
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:5, Informative)
FWIW:
The teflon coating found on many armor-piercing rounds for small arms has no effect on the armor-piercing ability of the ammunition. The teflon coat is to protect the barrel from excess wear caused by the hard materials of the projectile. Armor-piercing properties come from the composition of the projectile or from a insert of a harder substance incorporated into the projectile.
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2)
Armor piercing shells will still probably kill people, because shells are big. Armor-piercing bullets, however, are usually steel core lead, I believe.
A bullet is typically roughly a square centimeter in frontal surface area (give or take, yadda yadda), and they do not exert nearly as much pressure as 250 tons per square centimeter. I'm fairly certain of this, as no small arm (ie, personal firearm) can withs
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2)
It doesnt matter what kind of pressure your weapon can stand.
Just think aboutit: if you have a gun with a barrel lenght of 50cm, during which a gas pressure of "x" accelerates the bullet, how much preassure will the bullet project onto a surface if it is forced to stop during a 10cm distance (like outer layer of clothing to center of the hearth...)?
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2)
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2, Insightful)
Ya see, alot of people watched "V" back in the 80's and think teflon will help a slug penetrate high grade armor. Its like how people think they understand blackhole physics because they seen "event horizon"
People are idiots.
Re:Getting your point across. (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Just me? (Score:2, Interesting)
No, I Don't Agree (Score:2, Informative)
Due to the nature of their job who is going to get shot at more, the Army or police? Obviously it's the Army. So why shouldn't they get this armor?
Re:No, I Don't Agree (Score:2)
I'd rather the police be protected whilst stopping crime, that's more of a concern to most people than killing those evil Iraqis with their WMDs...
Re:No, I Don't Agree (Score:2)
Re:No, I Don't Agree (Score:3, Insightful)
You should be mad at the government that decided to start an ill advised war that was justified by frabricated evidence, has cost many, many more lives than 911, and made the USA LESS safe.
All this assumes you are speaking about the USA army.
Re:No, I Don't Agree (Score:2)
The guys in uniform don't (usually) start the war - they follow the orders of those who do. Your best bet, rather than reducing the defense budget now, is to convince congress to quit sending our troops off to fight. Once we're not fighting all the time
It is only you! (Score:2, Insightful)
I disagree with your statement because it implies that you would prefer more of our soldiers to die.
I don't want our soldiers to die.
I'd rather give it to civilians. (Score:2)
Re:Just me? (Score:2)
Re:Just me? (Score:2)
But whatever it is, it's definitly a sick-0 traitor who should be executed.
Re:bleh... (Score:5, Insightful)
Most military members do care quite a bit about civil rights, but they're not in a position to protect them unless ordered to.
Police act much more individually, so it depends on the cop. Some will play by the rules, some won't. Like Bob Dyllan said, sometimes you just find yourself over the line - in that sort of situation, best hope you get some good ones. In the end, though, it's up to the courts to protect your civil liberties.
Re:Just me? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Just me? (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't much care if it goes to the police or the military, so long as they're still seperate. But have you seen the medieval armour illustration that goes with this? If the material is as light as they say, and as strong as they say, then what's the most logical styling for this stuff? I can see a renaissance in medieval style armours.
Of course, escalation means people quickly resort to gas /
Re:Just me? (Score:3, Insightful)
Alright, I've heard this sentence a lot ... how in the hell are soldiers occupying a foreign country protecting your freedom? I mean, if the soldiers were stationed in your homeland and a foreign invasion was imminent, that I could understand, but while they're occupying some third world country halfway across the globe? Nope, does not follow.
At least be honest about it and say they're helping you capture and control key resources or keep others from challen
Re:Just me? (Score:2)
They are defending our freedom in the sense that they exist and are a very good deterrant. They keep, say, Canada from invading us because Canada knows it couldn't win without extremely significant loss of life, if at all.
So they're not out there defen
Re:Just me? (Score:3, Insightful)
You should avoid a career in strategy. A defensive posture as you suggest is inferior to an offensive strategy that takes the fight to the enemy, denies the enemy the initiative, dictates the terrain to the enemy,
Re:Just me? (Score:3, Informative)
We occupied Iraq, jihadists are coming to us there. We seem to be in agreement with the Tao in this case.
Vietnam was lost because the US fought an enemy on their own ground, where they could defend and hide as a native force.
Perhaps you have a poor translation of S
Re:Just me? (Score:2)
To wit: Handguns.
Next up Shotguns. level II or even III isn't going to protect you if they're packing slugs, but can be of great benefit against buckshot. Heck, the number of crooks who try to use birdshot is suprising!
Criminals rarely use rifles. So called 'assault weapons' are the rarest of all. Of course, I hear a good amount of confiscations, but not usage.
Meanwhile, over in the desert we ha
Revised Headline: (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Revised Headline: (Score:2, Funny)
No wonder they're developing 'nano' stuff.
Re:Revised Headline: (Score:2)
If this stuff is so great, it probably won't be sold on thinkgeek. Got to keep the kids away from the good stuff.
Good news (Score:5, Funny)
Right now we cannot deploy nanosoldiers due to the high risk of being trodden upon. This brings us one step closer to a solution.
Re:Good news (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Good news (Score:2)
Bashing Soak (Score:2, Funny)
Call me a skeptic... (Score:4, Interesting)
Invest now! 500% returns in the first year! BUY BUY BUY!
whats new dufus (Score:2)
Unless BG or Paul Allen bank rolls you, extra funding via IPO/part ownership is always seeked. Sure google and many
companies dont NEED IPOs or stocks to gain cash, they could easily get all the cash they need via banks/bonds to do what
they need. Its just that stocks is a way to 'spread the risk' onto 500000 clients rather than 1 ie, the bank. The world is
awash with capitol unlike the pre 20's because we havent had a major war that destroys ca
Finally... (Score:5, Funny)
Is it Chemical proof? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Is it Chemical proof? (Score:2)
Re:Is it Chemical proof? (Score:2)
Re:Is it Chemical proof? (Score:2)
Re:Is it Chemical proof? (Score:2)
Depleted Uranium rounds have efficacy because uranium is extremely hard, strong, and dense. A DU round at a given velocity carries more kinetic energy than a projectile of the same volume and velocity that's made of steel or lead, so it hurts more when it hits. Since it's hard, it doesn't deform easily when it hits, and so more of the KE is transferred into the
Re:Is it Chemical proof? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Is it Chemical proof? (Score:2)
White Phosphorous is not really a chemical weapon either. A few people have been saying it is lately, so that they can say "The US is using chemical weapons! They are using WMDs!" Sort of like how China accused us of using "Chemical weapons" in North Korea... when in fact we were using tear gas to smoke NKs out of bunkers in lieu of out and out killing them. It's a political motivated definition ma
Re:Is it Chemical proof? (Score:2)
True. However, what really makes depleted uranium munitions exceptional for inflicting damage against hardened targets is that they "flare" on contact, so you essentially have an incendiary armor-piercing round, such as the PGU-14B 30mm round fired by the 19-foot-long GAU-8A Avenger autocannon nested within the fuselage the U.S. Army's A-10 Thunderbolt II (commonly called by the nickname "Warthog"). I've seen archival test
Rifle Bullets vs. Depleted Uranium (Score:2)
Depleted uranium isn't something that would normally be used for rifle bullets - it's used for big honking anti-tank rounds, and it's unlikely that nanotech body armor would keep you alive if you're hit by one of them even if it could keep it from penetrating - there's just too much kinetic energy that's going to get dissipated arou
Re:Rifle Bullets vs. Depleted Uranium (Score:2)
Or better yet, use this material as a secondary (tertiary?) armor layer beneath the ablative-reactive armor deployed on most M1 tanks, perhaps beneath the conventional steel of the tank's hull, thus affording greater protection for the crew (arguably the greatest asset of the tank).
Erm... just a thought.
Shock Absorbing !=Survivability? (Score:2)
What I want to know is: if the projectile hits a helmet, even thought it won't penetrate it, will it still cause enough force to break the wearers neck? If a projectile hits the wearers chest, will it break ribs and shock organs?
Body armor can stop some projectiles, but it will still leave, at best, a nasty bruise.
Alaskan Volcano Getting Stinky, May Erupt [suvalleynews.com]
Re:Shock Absorbing !=Survivability? (Score:2)
Re:Shock Absorbing !=Survivability? (Score:2)
An AK-47 can be fired full auto without falling, therefore a person can absorb all the KE of every bullet fired without falling. The only way being hit would make you fall if you had impenetrable (to an
Re:Shock Absorbing !=Survivability? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Shock Absorbing !=Survivability? (Score:2)
Re:Shock Absorbing !=Survivability? (Score:2)
Then maybe you've never heard of the Barrett Light 50, aka M82A1/2/3. I've shot them, and it's not bad at all. I certainly would not want to be on the receiving end.
Alaskan Volcano Getting Stinky, May Erupt [suvalleynews.com]
Re:Shock Absorbing (Score:3, Insightful)
As an aside, necks are tougher than most people think. In movies, the hero grabs the villian by the head and makes a severe twisting motion accompanied by a loud "CRACK". In real life, the amount of force needed to break a neck
Re:Shock Absorbing (Score:3, Informative)
I was thinking about this the other day. Conservation of momentum only means that the force applied to the target by the bullet as it deccelerates will be equal to the force applied to the bullet, which is why it deforms. The fo
Re:Shock Absorbing (Score:2)
Re:Shock Absorbing (Score:2)
In real life, the amount of force needed to break a neck seems to exceed the amoount of force that a SUV traveling at 35 mph imparts to a stopped vehicle at a stoplight. Whiplash is the usual outcome of a multi ton vehicle traveling at 35 mph.
Umm you got your physics wrong. The mass of the hitting vehicle has little to do with the force applied to the neck of the driver that was hit. I could bore you with formulas, but a good way to demonstrate that you are wrong is examine the case of an infinitiely ma
Re:Shock Absorbing (Score:2)
OK - since we are not talking about rigid bodies here energy is absorbed by deforming the material and the amount absorbed is related to the amount of stress required to push the material out of shape a given amount - it's also rate dependant. As people have learned from bicycle helmets, the last thing you want is a impregnable rigid helmet that tranfers a lot of energy to your skull. Unfortuntely the headline for this story appears to be all screwed up - strength isn't the importan
Re:Shock Absorbing !=Survivability? (Score:2)
If a projectile hits the wearers chest, will it break ribs and shock organs?
Probably. Cops that are hit while wearing their Kevlar vests get bruises, and even cracked ribs. It's better than a bullet hole, more like getting a whack with a baseball bat.
Helmet answer Re:Shock Absorbing !=Survivability? (Score:2)
I know this M1 link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1_Helmet [wikipedia.org] states that:
"Many men thought that when a bomb went off etc., the chinstrap would snap their neck when the helmet wold be blown off their head. This was also a disproved theory."
The above is actually both correct as well as untrue. http://www.combatreform.com/chinstrap.htm [combatreform.com] states that:
"During the course of the North African campaigns in 1943, the rigid hook fastener of the chinstrap was found to be a sou
In The Cross Hairs (Score:2, Interesting)
I mean IF a helmet was made... would the user suffer a concussion? Or just feel nothing...?
Re:In The Cross Hairs (Score:5, Informative)
In the Society for Creative Anachronism, people can fight in various amounts of steel armor and wield rattan swords. This always includes a helm and some other mandatory armor.
One man got the idea to make his mandatory helmet out of titanium. Titanium is stronger than steel, but less dense. When he went into combat that day with his new helmet, he took one good whack to the head that someone wearing a steel helm would have shrugged off. With his lighter titanium model, he was knocked unconscious and got a concussion. The helmet was undamaged, however.
It all goes back to physics: action, reaction, momentum.
"The Armor Of The Future"? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:"The Armor Of The Future"? (Score:2)
Not perfect, just better (Score:2, Insightful)
question is: is it better than ceramic armor? (Score:3, Insightful)
Cocky Armor (Score:3, Funny)
But did you really need to give the armor a six-pack [isracast.com]?
Once again, complete BS (Score:2)
For example, glass is extremely strong in compression, but easily shattered.
The steel used to make files is also extremely strong, but shatters with the slightest impact.
What you need to handle impact is a material that can spread the impact energy as uniformly as possible over TIME and SPACE. So you need something that's extremely uniform and ductile.
This stuff may be good for something, but touting it as g
Micrometeorite protection (Score:2, Insightful)
Note to Journalists: say what the numbers mean (Score:2)
Re:Sometimes seems (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe we should just all get a pair and beat on each other until we get bored and move on to something better, or resort to bio/chem/nuclear warfare!
Re:Sometimes seems (Score:2)
Maybe, but this is primarily a defensive material. Its not a weapon per se. If this could be used to make lightweight garments which are resistant to some bullets and nearby explosions you could outfit children in landmine infested areas and save a lot of lives.
And you've made a critical point... (Score:3, Insightful)
The first obvious application of this technology is war or oppression of one's own citizens. This bothers me probably as much as anyone else here, but the question I po
Re:The problem is... (Score:5, Insightful)
Carbon fibre is also "stronger than steel" but pull it in the wrong way and it'll break like glass [which admitedly is usually the point]. What size/weight/type of projectile at what velocity will be stopped. That's useful.
Nice to know your vest will stop a handgun but if a
Tom
Re:The problem is... (Score:2)
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/ [nist.gov]
http://ts.nist.gov/ts/htdocs/200/202/metrsty3.htm [nist.gov]
http://www.metric4us.com/ [metric4us.com]
Re:The problem is... (Score:2)
I've found that about a foot and a half works quite well, at least on handgun bullets
Might need a meter or two for high power rifle, though.
Re:The problem is... (Score:4, Informative)
Nice to know your vest will stop a handgun but if a
Most modern armies use body armor and helmets even if they don't help against rifle bullets. Why? To protect against shrapnel (which iirc accounts for about 80 % of casualties in full scale warfare). So even if this doesn't protect against rifle bullets, it isn't exactly useless as long as it's an improvement over the standard kevlar stuff.
Re:The problem is... (Score:2)
I call bullshit. Cite sources please.
Thanks.
Going the other way... (Score:2)
Re:The problem is... (Score:2)
Please do! I live in rural Pennsylvania, where there are a lot of hunters. I don't myself hunt, but having grown up in the area, well let's just say I'm intrigued by the premise of a standard hunter's arrow penetrating the armor of even a light military vehicle.
Re:The problem is... (Score:2)
When an
Tom
Re:The problem is... (Score:2)
I've seen some tricks done with things like buckets of sand, where the arrow will penetrate completely through, while bullets are stopped.
Re:The problem is... (Score:5, Funny)
*Whether "nothingness" is Void, Null, Cipher, Zero, Nothing, or Jersey is still under debate.
Re:I'm shocked, shocked I tell you! (Score:2, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:OMG THIS IS TOTALLY UT2004! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Yes... (Score:2)
Eyeglasses were from either Northern Italy or China (dev'd about the same time). The triangular sail thing is about 1800 years ago (pre-Islam) and questionable if it came from there. They didn't originate astronomy - the Greeks did - though I suppose, again, about 1000 years ago. Irrigation was even longer before that (and man, then that's the only place people existed). Same stupid argument for the wheel.
The folks who did all of that are NOT the same people/ethnicity and more important