jtg452 wrote:TFLYTSNBN wrote:Well this is disappointing. Only 2,000 meters per second muzzle velocity from a pulsar pistol. Heck, the sabot rounds from an Abrahms tank is about 1,400 meters per second.
It is interesting as well as easy to estimate the average recoil force from a full auto Pulsar. They come in various calibers and projectile masses. Assume a projectile mass of about 23 grains or about 1.5 grams, a muzzle velocity of 2,000 meters per second, and a fitting rate of 600 rounds per minute or 10 rounds per second.
The mass flow rate is then 15 grams per second or .015 kg per second. Multiply by muzzle velocity of 2,000 meters per second and you get a recoil force of 30 Newtons. This is the equivalent of a 3 kilogram weight in a one gee gravity field.
Modern handgun ammunition rarely exceeds Mach 1.2 or 1.3 (14-1500fps), so a 4 fold increase in velocity would have a tremendous impact on any calculations.
On the other hand, RFC's pulsers are reliant on that velocity to do any sort of damage since the projectiles themselves are extremely light weight. Modern ammunition still has enough projectile weight that momentum retention has an impact on penetration. Mass (weight) retains momentum. Light weight bullets need higher velocities because they shed that momentum faster. A softball rolling on the ground can be stopped by putting your foot on it. Doing the same with a 4 pounder cannon ball leads to the loss of the foot.
Low velocity rounds as the 19th Century buffalo gun rounds (which had muzzle velocities equal to modern handgun rounds but were using bullets that weighed 4 times more) had such remarkable penetration abilities. Muzzle velocities of 12-1400fps were common- yet they were used to kill off the American bison to the point of extinction in little more than a decade.
Your own numbers quoted above put a pulser dart's weight at about 2/3 that of the most common .22LR bullet. At that weight, it had better have some serious velocity if it's going to have any sort of effectiveness down range.
TFTSNBN wrote:Projectile mass is important to achieve penetration, but it is the sectional density, not the mass, that combines with velocity to yield momentum density that dictates penetration.
Even at "only" 2,000 meters per second, those long, slender, Honorverse Pulsar darts have enough momentum density to penetrate a human torso from the top of the skull to the butt. In fact over penetration with minimal wounding from impacts at more normal aspects should be an issue. The only thing that makes these long, slender, hyper velocity pulsar days truly effective is the certainty that they will yaw upon impact. Weber mentions that pulsar days are son stabilized. I haven't calculated the skin rate needed to stabilize them, but it is extremely high. Imagine a 3mm x 25 mm dart yawing upon impact then tumbling at high rpm as it travels through a body like a buzz saw.
BTW, I'm one of the guys that writes the external ballistics programs that "gun experts" use to calculate trajectories as well as doing the internal ballistics calculations needed to determine what recipes are safe for hand reloading.
Although true about a projectile's mass, that part of the equation can be skirted. Consider an advanced round that is engineered from futuristic materials or processes which is super light weight by comparison but considerably stronger than any conventional round and is engineered to be aerodynamic and resist losing impact energy because of round destruction. Most rounds that are found in a body sustain damage and are crumpled.