Naval Surface Warfare Center test firing in January 2008
A railgun is a device, typically designed as a weapon, that uses electromagnetic force to launch high velocity projectiles. The projectile normally does not contain explosives, instead relying on the projectile's high speed and kinetic energy to inflict damage. The railgun uses a pair of parallel conductors (rails), along which a sliding armature
 is accelerated by the electromagnetic effects of a current that flows 
down one rail, into the armature and then back along the other rail. It 
is based on principles similar to those of the homopolar motor.
As of 2020, railguns have been researched as weapons utilising electromagnetic forces to impart a very high kinetic energy to a projectile (e.g. APFSDS) rather than using conventional propellants. While explosive-powered military guns cannot readily achieve a muzzle velocity
 of more than ≈2 km/s, railguns can readily exceed 3 km/s. For a similar
 projectile, the range of railguns may exceed that of conventional guns.
 The destructive force of a projectile depends on its kinetic energy at 
the point of impact and due to the potentially high velocity of a 
railgun-launched projectile, their destructive force may be much greater
 than conventionally launched projectiles of the same size. The absence 
of explosive propellants or warheads to store and handle, as well as the
 low cost of projectiles compared to conventional weaponry, come as 
additional advantages.
Notwithstanding the above advantages, railguns are still very much at the research stage after decades of R&D,
 and it remains to be seen whether or not they will ever be deployed as 
practical military weapons. Any trade-off analysis between 
electromagnetic (EM) propulsion systems and chemical propellants for 
weapons applications must also factor in its durability, availability 
and economics, as well as the novelty, bulkiness, high energy demand and
 complexity of the pulsed power supplies that are needed for 
electromagnetic launcher systems. 
In addition to military applications, NASA has proposed to use a railgun to launch "wedge-shaped aircraft with scramjets" to high-altitude at Mach 10, where they will then fire a small payload into orbit using conventional rocket propulsion. The extreme g-forces
 involved with direct railgun ground-launch to space may restrict the 
usage to only the sturdiest of payloads. Alternatively, very long rail 
systems may be used to reduce the required launch acceleration.
Basics
The railgun in its simplest form differs from a traditional electric motor
 in that no use is made of additional field windings (or permanent 
magnets). This basic configuration is formed by a single loop of current
 and thus requires high currents (e.g., of order one million amperes) to
 produce sufficient accelerations (and muzzle velocities). A relatively 
common variant of this configuration is the augmented railgun in 
which the driving current is channelled through additional pairs of 
parallel conductors, arranged to increase ('augment') the magnetic field
 experienced by the moving armature.
 These arrangements reduce the current required for a given 
acceleration. In electric motor terminology, augmented railguns are 
usually series-wound
 configurations. Some railguns also use strong neodymium magnets with 
the field perpendicular to the current flow to increase the force on the
 projectile.
The armature may be an integral part of the projectile, but it 
may also be configured to accelerate a separate, electrically isolated 
or non-conducting projectile. Solid, metallic sliding conductors are 
often the preferred form of railgun armature but plasma or 'hybrid' armatures can also be used.
 A plasma armature is formed by an arc of ionised gas that is used to 
push a solid, non-conducting payload in a similar manner to the 
propellant gas pressure in a conventional gun. A hybrid armature uses a 
pair of plasma contacts to interface a metallic armature to the gun 
rails. Solid armatures may also 'transition' into hybrid armatures, 
typically after a particular velocity threshold is exceeded.
A railgun requires a pulsed DC power supply.
 For potential military applications, railguns are usually of interest 
because they can achieve much greater muzzle velocities than guns 
powered by conventional chemical propellants. Increased muzzle 
velocities with better aerodynamically streamlined projectiles can 
convey the benefits of increased firing ranges while, in terms of target
 effects, increased terminal velocities can allow the use of kinetic 
energy rounds incorporating hit-to-kill guidance, as replacements for explosive shells.
 Therefore, typical military railgun designs aim for muzzle velocities 
in the range of 2,000–3,500 m/s (4,500–7,800 mph; 7,200–12,600 km/h) 
with muzzle energies of 5–50 megajoules
(MJ). For comparison, 50 MJ is equivalent to the kinetic energy of a school bus weighing 5 metric tons, travelling at 509 km/h (316 mph; 141 m/s). For single loop railguns, these mission requirements require launch currents of a few million amperes,
 so a typical railgun power supply might be designed to deliver a launch
 current of 5 MA for a few milliseconds. As the magnetic field strengths
 required for such launches will typically be approximately 10 tesla (100 kilogauss), most contemporary railgun designs are effectively air-cored, i.e., they do not use ferromagnetic materials
 such as iron to enhance the magnetic flux. However, if the barrel is 
made of a magnetically permeable material, the magnetic field strength 
increases due to the increase in permeability (μ = μ0*μr, where μ is the effective permeability, μ0 is the permeability constant and μr is the relative permeability of the barrel). This automatically increases the force. 
Railgun velocities generally fall within the range of those achievable by two-stage light-gas guns;
 however, the latter are generally only considered to be suitable for 
laboratory use, while railguns are judged to offer some potential 
prospects for development as military weapons.  Another light gas gun, 
the Combustion Light Gas Gun in a 155 mm prototype form was projected to
 achieve 2500 m/s with a .70 caliber barrel.  In some hypervelocity
 research projects, projectiles are 'pre-injected' into railguns, to 
avoid the need for a standing start, and both two-stage light-gas guns 
and conventional powder guns have been used for this role.  In 
principle, if railgun power supply technology can be developed to 
provide safe, compact, reliable, combat survivable, and lightweight 
units, then the total system volume and mass needed to accommodate such a
 power supply and its primary fuel can become less than the required 
total volume and mass for a mission equivalent quantity of conventional 
propellants and explosive ammunition.  Arguably such technology has been
 matured with the introduction of the Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System
 (EMALS) (albeit that railguns require much higher system powers, 
because roughly similar energies must be delivered in a few 
milliseconds, as opposed to a few seconds).  Such a development would 
then convey a further military advantage in that the elimination of 
explosives from any military weapons platform will decrease its 
vulnerability to enemy fire.
History
German railgun diagrams
The concept of the railgun was first introduced by French inventor 
Andre Louis Octave Fauchon-Villeplee, who created a small working model 
in 1917 with the help of the Société anonyme des accumulateurs Tudor (now Tudor Batteries). During World War I, the Director of Inventions at the Ministry of Armaments, Jules-Louis Brenton,
 commissioned Fauchon-Villeplee to develop a 30-mm to 50-mm electric 
cannon on July 25, 1918 after delegates from the Commission des 
Inventions witnessed test trials of the working model in 1917. However, 
the project was abandoned once World War I ended later that year on November 3, 1918.
 Fauchon-Villeplee filed for a US patent on 1 April 1919, which was 
issued in July 1922 as patent no. 1,421,435 "Electric Apparatus for 
Propelling Projectiles". In his device, two parallel busbars are connected by the wings of a projectile, and the whole apparatus surrounded by a magnetic field.
 By passing current through busbars and projectile, a force is induced 
which propels the projectile along the bus-bars and into flight.
In 1923, Russian scientist A. L. Korol’kov detailed his 
criticisms of Fauchon-Villeplee's design, arguing against some of the 
claims that Fauchon-Villeplee made about the advantages of his 
invention. Korol’kov eventually concluded that while the construction of
 a long-range electric gun was within the realm of possibility, the 
practical application of Fauchon-Villeplee's railgun was hindered by its
 enormous electric energy consumption and its need for a special 
electric generator of considerable capacity to power it.
In 1944, during World War II, Joachim Hänsler of Nazi Germany's Ordnance Office proposed the first theoretically viable railgun. By late 1944, the theory behind his electric anti-aircraft gun had been worked out sufficiently to allow the Luftwaffe's
 Flak Command to issue a specification, which demanded a muzzle velocity
 of 2,000 m/s (4,500 mph; 7,200 km/h; 6,600 ft/s) and a projectile 
containing 0.5 kg (1.1 lb) of explosive. The guns were to be mounted in 
batteries of six firing twelve rounds per minute, and it was to fit 
existing 12.8 cm FlaK 40
 mounts. It was never built. When details were discovered after the war 
it aroused much interest and a more detailed study was done, culminating
 with a 1947 report which concluded that it was theoretically feasible, 
but that each gun would need enough power to illuminate half of Chicago.
During 1950, Sir Mark Oliphant, an Australian physicist and first director of the Research School of Physical Sciences at the new Australian National University, initiated the design and construction of the world's largest (500 megajoule) homopolar generator.
  This machine was operational from 1962 and was later used to power a 
large-scale railgun that was used as a scientific experiment.
In 1980, the Ballistic Research Laboratory (later consolidated to form the U.S. Army Research Laboratory) began a long-term program of theoretical and experimental research on railguns. The work was conducted predominantly at the Aberdeen Proving Ground, and much of the early research drew inspiration from the railgun experiments performed by the Australian National University. Topics of research included plasma dynamics, electromagnetic fields, telemetry, and current and heat transport.
 While military research into railgun technology in the United States 
ensued continuously in the following decades, the direction and focus 
that it took shifted dramatically with major changes in funding levels 
and the needs of different government agencies. In 1984, the formation 
of the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization caused research goals to shift toward establishing a constellation of satellites to intercept intercontinental ballistic missiles.
 As a result, the U.S. military focused on developing small guided 
projectiles that could withstand the high-G launch from ultra-high 
velocity plasma armature railguns. But after the publication of an 
important Defense Science Board study in 1985, the U.S. Army, Marine Corps, and DARPA were assigned to develop anti-armor, electromagnetic launch technologies for mobile ground combat vehicles. In 1990, the U.S. Army collaborated with the University of Texas at Austin
 to establish the Institute for Advanced Technology (IAT), which focused
 on research involving solid and hybrid armatures, rail-armature 
interactions, and electromagnetic launcher materials. The facility became the Army's first Federally Funded Research and Development Center and housed a few of the Army's electromagnetic launchers, such as the Medium Caliber Launcher.
Since 1993 the British and American governments have collaborated on a railgun project at the Dundrennan Weapons Testing Centre that culminated in the 2010 test where BAE Systems fired a 3.2 kg (7 pound) projectile at 18.4-megajoules [3,390 m/s (7,600 mph; 12,200 km/h; 11,100 ft/s)]. In 1994, India's DRDO's Armament Research and Development Establishment
 developed a railgun with a 240 kJ, low inductance capacitor bank  
operating at 5 kV power able to launch projectiles of 3–3.5 g weight to a
 velocity of more than 2,000 m/s (4,500 mph; 7,200 km/h; 6,600 ft/s).
 In 1995, the Center for Electromagnetics at the University of Texas at 
Austin designed and developed a rapid-fire railgun launcher called the Cannon-Caliber Electromagnetic Gun. The launcher prototype was later tested at the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, where it demonstrated a breech efficiency over 50 percent.
In 2010, the United States Navy tested a BAE Systems-designed compact-sized railgun for ship emplacement that accelerated a 3.2 kg (7 pound) projectile to hypersonic velocities of approximately 3,390 m/s (7,600 mph; 12,200 km/h; 11,100 ft/s), or about Mach 10, with 18.4 MJ of kinetic energy. It was the first time in history that such levels of performance were reached. They gave the project the motto "Velocitas Eradico", Latin for "I, [who am] speed, eradicate"—or in the vernacular, "Speed Kills". 
An earlier railgun of the same design (32-megajoules) resides at the Dundrennan Weapons Testing Centre in the United Kingdom.
Low power, small scale railguns have also made popular college 
and amateur projects. Several amateurs actively carry out research on 
railguns. No practical railgun weapon has been developed or is expected in the near-future as of January 2020.
Design
Theory
A railgun consists of two parallel
 metal rails (hence the name). At one end, these rails are connected to 
an electrical power supply, to form the breech end of the gun. Then, if a
 conductive projectile is inserted between the rails (e.g. by insertion 
into the breech), it completes the circuit. Electrons flow from the 
negative terminal of the power supply up the negative rail, across the 
projectile, and down the positive rail, back to the power supply.
This current makes the railgun behave as an electromagnet,
 creating a magnetic field inside the loop formed by the length of the 
rails up to the position of the armature. In accordance with the right-hand rule,
 the magnetic field circulates around each conductor. Since the current 
is in the opposite direction along each rail, the net magnetic field 
between the rails (B) is directed at right angles to the plane 
formed by the central axes of the rails and the armature. In combination
 to all  with the current (I) in the armature, this produces a Lorentz force
 which accelerates the projectile along the rails, always out of the 
loop (regardless of supply polarity) and away from the power supply, 
towards the muzzle end of the rails. There are also Lorentz forces 
acting on the rails and attempting to push them apart, but since the 
rails are mounted firmly, they cannot move. 
By definition, if a current of one ampere flows in a pair of 
ideal infinitely long parallel conductors that are separated by a 
distance of one meter, then the magnitude of the force on each meter of 
those conductors will be exactly 0.2 micro-newtons. Furthermore, in 
general, the force will be proportional to the square of the magnitude 
of the current and inversely proportional to the distance between the 
conductors. It also follows that, for railguns with projectile masses of
 a few kg and barrel lengths of a few m, very large currents will be 
required to accelerate projectiles to velocities of the order of 
1000 m/s.
A very large power supply, providing on the order of one million 
amperes of current, will create a tremendous force on the projectile, 
accelerating it to a speed of many kilometres per second (km/s).  
Although these speeds are possible, the heat generated from the 
propulsion of the object is enough to erode the rails rapidly. Under 
high-use conditions, current railguns would require frequent replacement
 of the rails, or to use a heat-resistant material that would be 
conductive enough to produce the same effect. At this time it is 
generally acknowledged that it will take major breakthroughs in 
materials science and related disciplines to produce high-powered 
railguns capable of firing more than a few shots from a single set of 
rails. The barrel must withstand these conditions for up to several 
rounds per minute for thousands of shots without failure or significant 
degradation. These parameters are well beyond the state of the art in 
materials science.
Mathematical formula
This section presents some elementary analysis of the fundamental 
theoretical electromagnetic principles that govern the mechanics of 
railguns. 
If a railgun were to provide a uniform magnetic field of strength , oriented at right angles to both the armature and the bore axis, then, with an armature current  and an armature length , the force  accelerating the projectile would be given by the formula:
Here the force, current and field are all treated as vectors, so the 
above vector cross product gives a force directed along the bore axis, 
acting on the current in the armature, as a consequence of the magnetic 
field.
In most simple railguns, the magnetic field 
 is only provided by the current flowing in the rails, i.e. behind the 
armature. It follows that the magnetic field will neither be constant 
nor spatially uniform. Hence, in practice, the force must be calculated 
after making due allowances for the spatial variation of the magnetic 
field over the volume of the armature. 
To illustrate the principles involved, it can be useful to 
consider the rails and the armature as  thin wires or "filaments". With 
this approximation, the magnitude of the force vector can be determined 
from a form of the Biot–Savart law and a result of the Lorentz force. The force can be derived mathematically in terms of the permeability constant (), the radius of the rails (which are assumed to be circular in cross section) (), the distance between the central axes of the rails () and the current () as described below.
First, it can be shown from the Biot–Savart law that at one end 
of a semi-infinite current-carrying wire, the magnetic field at a given 
perpendicular distance () from the end of the wire is given by
Note this is if the wire runs from the location of the armature e.g. from x = 0 back to  and  is measured relative to the axis of the wire. 
So, if the armature connects the ends of two such semi-infinite wires separated by a distance, , a fairly good approximation assuming the length of the wires is much larger than , the total field from both wires at any point on the armature is:
where  is the perpendicular distance from the point on the armature to the axis of one of the wires.
Note that  between the rails is  assuming the rails are lying in the xy plane and run from x = 0 back to  as suggested above.
Next, to evaluate the force on the armature, the above expression
 for the magnetic field on the armature can be used in conjunction with 
the Lorentz Force Law, 
To give the force as
This shows that the force will be proportional to the product of  and the square of the current, . Because the value of μ0 is small (4π×10−7 H/m) it follows that powerful railguns need large driving currents. 
The above formula is based on the assumption that the distance () between the point where the force () is measured and the beginning of the rails is greater than the separation of the rails () by a factor of about 3 or 4 ().
 Some other simplifying assumptions have also been made; to describe the
 force more accurately, the geometry of the rails and the projectile 
must be considered.
With most practical railgun geometries, it is not easy to produce
 an electromagnetic expression for the railgun force that is both simple
 and reasonably accurate. For a more workable simple model, a useful 
alternative is to use a lumped circuit model, to describe the 
relationship between the driving current and the railgun force.
In these models the railgun is modeled on an electrical circuit 
and the driving force can be determined from the energy flow in the 
circuit. The voltage across the railgun breech is given by
So the total power flowing into the railgun is then simply the product .
 This power represents an energy flow into three main forms: kinetic 
energy in the projectile and armature, energy stored in the magnetic 
field,  and energy lost via electrical resistance heating of the rails (and armature). 
As the projectile travels along the barrel, the distance from the
 breech to the armature increases. Hence the resistance and inductance 
of the barrel also increase. For a simple model, the barrel resistance 
and inductance can be assumed to vary as linear functions of the 
projectile position, , so these quantities are modelled as
where  is the resistance per unit length and  is the inductance per unit length, or the inductance gradient. It follows that
where  is the all-important projectile velocity, . Then
Now, if the driving current is held constant, the  term will be zero. Resistive losses now correspond to a power flow , while the power flow  represents the electromagnetic work done.
This simple model predicts that exactly half of the 
electromagnetic work will be used to store energy in the magnetic field 
along the barrel, , as the length of the current loop increases.
The other half of the electromagnetic work represents the more 
useful power flow - into the kinetic energy of the projectile. Since 
power can be expressed as force times speed, this shows  the force on 
the railgun armature is given by
This equation also shows that high accelerations will require very 
high currents. For an ideal square bore single-turn railgun, the value 
of  would be about 0.6 microHenries per metre (μH/m) but most practical railgun barrels exhibit lower values of  than this. Maximizing the inductance gradient is but one of the challenges faced by the designers of railgun barrels.
Since the lumped circuit model describes the railgun force in 
terms of fairly normal circuit equations, it becomes possible to specify
 a simple time domain model of a railgun.
5yg
Ignoring friction and air drag, the projectile acceleration is given by
where m is the projectile mass. The motion along the barrel is given by
and the above voltage and current terms can be placed into 
appropriate circuit equations to determine the time variation of current
 and voltage. 
It can also be noted that the textbook formula for the high frequency inductance per unit length of a pair of parallel round wires, of radius r and axial separation d is:
So the lumped parameter model also predicts the force for this case as:
With practical railgun geometries, much more accurate two or three 
dimensional models of the rail and armature current distributions (and 
the associated forces) can be computed, e.g., by using finite element 
methods to solve formulations based on either the scalar magnetic 
potential or the magnetic vector potential.
Design considerations
The
 power supply must be able to deliver large currents, sustained and 
controlled over a useful amount of time. The most important gauge of 
power supply effectiveness is the energy it can deliver. As of December 
2010, the greatest known energy used to propel a projectile from a 
railgun was 33 megajoules. The most common forms of power supplies used in railguns are capacitors and compulsators which are slowly charged from other continuous energy sources.
The rails need to withstand enormous repulsive forces during 
shooting, and these forces will tend to push them apart and away from 
the projectile. As rail/projectile clearances increase, arcing
 develops, which causes rapid vaporization and extensive damage to the 
rail surfaces and the insulator surfaces. This limited some early 
research railguns to one shot per service interval. 
The inductance and resistance of the rails and power supply limit
 the efficiency of a railgun design. Currently different rail shapes and
 railgun configurations are being tested, most notably by the U.S. Navy (Naval Research Laboratory), the Institute for Advanced Technology at the University of Texas at Austin, and BAE Systems.
Materials used
The rails and projectiles must be built from strong conductive
 materials; the rails need to survive the violence of an accelerating 
projectile, and heating due to the large currents and friction involved.
 Some erroneous work has suggested that the recoil force in railguns can
 be redirected or eliminated; careful theoretical and experimental 
analysis reveals that the recoil force acts on the breech closure just 
as in a chemical firearm.
 The rails also repel themselves via a sideways force caused by the 
rails being pushed by the magnetic field, just as the projectile is. The
 rails need to survive this without bending and must be very securely 
mounted.  Currently published material suggests that major advances in 
material science must be made before rails can be developed that allow 
railguns to fire more than a few full-power shots before replacement of 
the rails is required.
Heat dissipation
In current designs massive amounts of heat are created by the electricity flowing through the rails, as well as by the friction
 of the projectile leaving the device.  This causes three main problems:
 melting of equipment, decreased safety of personnel, and detection by 
enemy forces due to increased infrared signature.
As briefly discussed above, the stresses involved in firing this sort of
 device require an extremely heat-resistant material. Otherwise the 
rails, barrel, and all equipment attached would melt or be irreparably 
damaged.
In practice, the rails used with most railgun designs are subject
 to erosion from each launch. Additionally, projectiles can be subject 
to some degree of ablation, and this can limit railgun life, in some cases severely.
Applications
Railguns
 have a number of potential practical applications, primarily for the 
military. However, there are other theoretical applications currently 
being researched.
Launch or launch assist of spacecraft
Electrodynamic assistance to launch rockets has been studied. Space applications of this technology would likely involve specially formed electromagnetic coils and superconducting magnets. Composite materials would likely be used for this application.
For space launches from Earth, relatively short acceleration 
distances (less than a few km) would require very strong acceleration 
forces, higher than humans can tolerate. Other designs include a longer helical
 (spiral) track, or a large ring design whereby a space vehicle would 
circle the ring numerous times, gradually gaining speed, before being 
released into a launch corridor leading skyward.  Nevertheless, if 
technically feasible and cost effective to build, imparting 
hyper-velocity escape velocity
 to a projectile launching at sea level, where the atmosphere is the 
most dense, may result in much of the launch velocity being lost to aerodynamic drag.
  In addition, the projectile might still require some form of on-board 
guidance and control to realize a useful orbital insertion angle that 
may not be achievable based simply on the launcher's upward elevation 
angle relative to the surface of the earth.
In 2003, Ian McNab outlined a plan to turn this idea into a realized technology.
  Because of strong acceleration, this system would launch only sturdy 
materials, such as food, water, and – most importantly – fuel. Under 
ideal circumstances (equator, mountain, heading east) the system would 
cost $528/kg, compared with $5,000/kg on the conventional rocket.
 The McNab railgun could make approximately 2000 launches per year, for a
 total of maximum 500 tons launched per year. Because the launch track 
would be 1.6 km long, power will be supplied by a distributed network of
 100 rotating machines (compulsator) spread along the track.  Each 
machine would have a 3.3-ton carbon fibre rotor spinning at high speeds.
  A machine can recharge in a matter of hours using 10 MW power.  This 
machine could be supplied by a dedicated generator.  The total launch 
package would weigh almost 1.4 tons.  Payload per launch in these 
conditions is over 400 kg.
 There would be a peak operating magnetic field of 5 T—half of this 
coming from the rails, and the other half from augmenting magnets. This 
halves the required current through the rails, which reduces the power 
fourfold.
Weaponry
Drawings of electric gun projectiles
Electromagnetic Railgun located at the Naval Surface Warfare Center
Railguns are being researched as weapons with projectiles that do not
 contain explosives or propellants, but are given extremely high 
velocities: 2,500 m/s (8,200 ft/s) (approximately Mach 7 at sea level) or more. For comparison, the M16 rifle has a muzzle speed of 930 m/s (3,050 ft/s), and the 16"/50 caliber Mark 7 gun
  that armed World War II American battleships has a muzzle speed of 
760 m/s (2,490 ft/s)), which because of its much greater projectile mass
 (up to 2,700 pounds) generated a muzzle energy of 360 MJ and a 
downrange kinetic impact of energy of over 160 MJ (see also Project HARP).
 By firing smaller projectiles at extremely high velocities, railguns 
may yield kinetic energy impacts equal or superior to the destructive 
energy of 5"/54 caliber Mark 45 gun
 Naval guns, (which achieve up to 10MJ at the muzzle), but with greater 
range. This decreases ammunition size and weight, allowing more 
ammunition to be carried and eliminating the hazards of carrying 
explosives or propellants in a tank or naval weapons platform.  Also, by
 firing more aerodynamically streamlined projectiles at greater 
velocities, railguns may achieve greater range, less time to target, and
 at shorter ranges less wind drift, bypassing the physical limitations 
of conventional firearms: "the limits of gas expansion prohibit 
launching an unassisted projectile to velocities greater than about 
1.5 km/s and ranges of more than 50 miles [80 km] from a practical 
conventional gun system."
Current railgun technologies necessitate a long and heavy barrel,
 but a railgun's ballistics far outperform conventional cannons of equal
 barrel lengths. Railguns can also deliver area of effect damage by 
detonating a bursting charge in the projectile which unleashes a swarm 
of smaller projectiles over a large area.
Assuming that the many technical challenges facing fieldable 
railguns are overcome, including issues like railgun projectile 
guidance, rail endurance, and combat survivability and reliability of 
the electrical power supply, the increased launch velocities of railguns
 may provide advantages over more conventional guns for a variety of 
offensive and defensive scenarios. Railguns have limited potential to be
 used against both surface and airborne targets.
The first weaponized railgun planned for production, the General Atomics
 Blitzer system, began full system testing in September 2010. The weapon
 launches a streamlined discarding sabot round designed by Boeing's 
Phantom Works at 1,600 m/s (5,200 ft/s) (approximately Mach 5) with 
accelerations exceeding 60,000 gn. During one of the tests, the projectile was able to travel an additional 7 kilometres (4.3 mi)  downrange after penetrating a 1⁄8
 inch (3.2 mm) thick steel plate. The company hopes to have an 
integrated demo of the system by 2016 followed by production by 2019, 
pending funding. Thus far, the project is self-funded.
In October 2013, General Atomics unveiled a land based version of
 the Blitzer railgun. A company official claimed the gun could be ready 
for production in "two to three years".
Railguns are being examined for use as anti-aircraft weapons to intercept air threats, particularly anti-ship cruise missiles, in addition to land bombardment.  A supersonic sea-skimming
 anti-ship missile can appear over the horizon 20 miles from a warship, 
leaving a very short reaction time for a ship to intercept it.  Even if 
conventional defense systems react fast enough, they are expensive and 
only a limited number of large interceptors can be carried.  A railgun 
projectile can reach several times the speed of sound faster than a 
missile; because of this, it can hit a target, such as a cruise missile,
 much faster and farther away from the ship.  Projectiles are also 
typically much cheaper and smaller, allowing for many more to be carried
 (they have no guidance systems, and rely on the railgun to supply their
 kinetic energy, rather than providing it themselves).  The speed, cost,
 and numerical advantages of railgun systems may allow them to replace 
several different systems in the current layered defense approach.
 A railgun projectile without the ability to change course can hit 
fast-moving missiles at a maximum range of 30 nmi (35 mi; 56 km).
 As is the case with the Phalanx CIWS, unguided railgun rounds will 
require multiple/many shots to bring down maneuvering supersonic 
anti-ship missiles, with the odds of hitting the missile improving 
dramatically the closer it gets. The Navy plans for railguns to be able 
to intercept endoatmospheric
 ballistic missiles, stealthy air threats, supersonic missiles, and 
swarming surface threats; a prototype system for supporting interception
 tasks is to be ready by 2018, and operational by 2025. This timeframe 
suggests the weapons are planned to be installed on the Navy's 
next-generation surface combatants, expected to start construction by 
2028.
BAE Systems was at one point interested in installing railguns on their Future Combat Systems Manned Ground Vehicles. This program was the US Army's third attempt to replace the aging M2 Bradley.
India has successfully tested their own railgun. Russia, China, and Turkey's defence company ASELSAN  are also developing railguns.
Helical railgun
Helical railguns
 are multi-turn railguns that reduce rail and brush current by a factor 
equal to the number of turns. Two rails are surrounded by a helical 
barrel and the projectile or re-usable carrier is also helical. The 
projectile is energized continuously by two brushes sliding along the 
rails, and two or more additional brushes on the projectile serve to 
energize and commute several windings of the helical barrel direction in
 front of and/or behind the projectile. The helical railgun is a cross 
between a railgun and a coilgun. They do not currently exist in a practical, usable form. 
A helical railgun was built at MIT in 1980 and was powered by several banks of, for the time, large capacitors (approximately 4 farads).
 It was about 3 meters long, consisting of 2 meters of accelerating coil
 and 1 meter of decelerating coil. It was able to launch a glider or 
projectile about 500 meters.
Plasma railgun
A plasma railgun is a linear accelerator and a  plasma energy weapon
 which, like a projectile railgun, uses two long parallel electrodes to 
accelerate a "sliding short" armature. However, in a plasma railgun, the
 armature and ejected projectile consists of plasma, or hot, ionized, 
gas-like particles, instead of a solid slug of material. MARAUDER (Magnetically Accelerated Ring to Achieve Ultra-high Directed Energy and Radiation) is, or was, a United States Air Force Research Laboratory project concerning the development of a coaxial plasma railgun. It is one of several United States Government
 efforts to develop plasma-based projectiles. The first computer 
simulations occurred in 1990, and its first published experiment 
appeared on August 1, 1993.
 As of 1993 the project appeared to be in the early experimental stages.
 The weapon was able to produce doughnut-shaped rings of plasma and 
balls of lightning that exploded with devastating effects when hitting 
their target.
 The project's initial success led to it becoming classified, and only a
 few references to MARAUDER appeared after 1993. The project may or may 
not have been scrapped some time after 1995.
Tests
Diagram showing the cross-section of a linear motor cannon
Full-scale models have been built and fired, including a 90 mm 
(3.5 in) bore, 9 megajoule kinetic energy gun developed by the US DARPA.
 Rail and insulator wear problems still need to be solved before 
railguns can start to replace conventional weapons. Probably the oldest 
consistently successful system was built by the UK's Defence Research Agency at Dundrennan Range in Kirkcudbright, Scotland. This system was established in 1993 and has been operated for over 10 years.
The Yugoslavian
 Military Technology Institute developed, within a project named EDO-0, a
 railgun with 7 kJ kinetic energy, in 1985. In 1987 a successor was 
created, project EDO-1, that used projectile with a mass of 0.7 kg 
(1.5 lb) and achieved speeds of 3,000 m/s (9,800 ft/s), and with a mass 
of 1.1 kg (2.4 lb) reached speeds of 2,400 m/s (7,900 ft/s). It used a 
track length of 0.7 m (2.3 ft). According to those working on it, with 
other modifications it was able to achieve a speed of 4,500 m/s 
(14,800 ft/s). The aim was to achieve projectile speed of 7,000 m/s 
(23,000 ft/s).
China is now one of the major players in electromagnetic launchers; in 2012 it hosted the 16th International
Symposium on Electromagnetic Launch Technology (EML 2012) at Beijing. Satellite imagery in late 2010 suggested that tests were being conducted at an armor and artillery range near Baotou, in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.
United States Armed Forces
The
 United States military have expressed interest in pursuing research in 
electric gun technology throughout the late 20th century due to how 
electromagnetic guns don't require propellants to fire a shot like 
conventional gun systems, significantly increasing crew safety and 
reducing logistics costs, as well as provide a greater range. In 
addition, railgun systems have shown to potentially provide higher 
velocity of projectiles, which would increase accuracy for anti-tank, 
artillery, and air defense by decreasing the time it takes for the 
projectile to reach its target destination. During the early 1990s, the U.S. Army dedicated more than $150 million into electric gun research. At the University of Texas at Austin Center for Electromechanics, military railguns capable of delivering tungsten armor-piercing bullets with kinetic energies of nine megajoules (9 MJ) have been developed.
 Nine megajoules is enough energy to deliver 2 kg (4.4 lb) of projectile
 at 3 km/s (1.9 mi/s)—at that velocity, a sufficiently long rod of 
tungsten or another dense metal could easily penetrate a tank, and potentially pass through it.
The United States Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division
 demonstrated an 8 MJ railgun firing 3.2 kg (7.1 lb) projectiles in 
October 2006 as a prototype of a 64 MJ weapon to be deployed aboard Navy
 warships. The main problem the U.S. Navy has had with implementing a 
railgun cannon system is that the guns wear out due to the immense 
pressures, stresses and heat that are generated by the millions of 
amperes of current necessary to fire projectiles with megajoules of 
energy. While not nearly as powerful as a cruise missile like a BGM-109 Tomahawk,
 that will deliver 3,000 MJ of destructive energy to a target, such 
weapons would, in theory, allow the Navy to deliver more granular 
firepower at a fraction of the cost of a missile, and will be much 
harder to shoot down versus future defensive systems. For context, 
another relevant comparison is the Rheinmetall 120mm gun used on main battle tanks, which generates 9 MJ of muzzle energy.
In 2007 BAE Systems delivered a 32 MJ prototype (muzzle energy) to the U.S. Navy. The same amount of energy is released by the detonation of 4.8 kg (11 lb) of C4.
On January 31, 2008, the U.S. Navy tested a railgun that fired a 
projectile at 10.64 MJ with a muzzle velocity of 2,520 m/s (8,270 ft/s).
  The power was provided by a new 9-megajoule prototype capacitor bank 
using solid-state switches and high-energy-density capacitors delivered 
in 2007 and an older 32-MJ pulse power system from the US Army's Green 
Farm Electric Gun Research and Development Facility developed in the 
late 1980s that was previously refurbished by General Atomics 
Electromagnetic Systems (EMS) Division. It is expected to be ready between 2020 and 2025.
A test of a railgun took place on December 10, 2010, by the U.S. Navy at the Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division.
  During the test, the Office of Naval Research set a world record by 
conducting a 33 MJ shot from the railgun, which was built by BAE 
Systems.
A test took place in February 2012, at the Naval Surface Warfare 
Center Dahlgren Division.  While similar in energy to the aforementioned
 test, the railgun used is considerably more compact, with a more 
conventional looking barrel.  A General Atomics-built prototype was 
delivered for testing in October 2012.
In 2014 the U.S. Navy had plans to integrate a railgun that has a range of over 16 km (10 mi) onto a ship by 2016.[86]
 This weapon, while having a form factor more typical of a naval gun, 
will utilize components largely in common with those developed and 
demonstrated at Dahlgren. The hyper-velocity rounds weigh 10 kg (23 lb), are 18 in (460 mm), and are fired at Mach 7.
A future goal is to develop projectiles that are self-guided – a 
necessary requirement to hit distant targets or intercepting missiles. When the guided rounds are developed, the Navy is projecting each round to cost about $25,000,
 though developing guided projectiles for guns has a history of doubling
 or tripling initial cost estimates. Some high velocity projectiles 
developed by the Navy have command guidance, but the accuracy of the 
command guidance is not known, nor even if it can survive a full power 
shot.
Currently, the only U.S. Navy ships that can produce enough electrical power to get desired performance are the three Zumwalt-class destroyers
 (DDG-1000 series); they can generate 78 megawatts of power, more than 
is necessary to power a railgun. However, the Zumwalt has been cancelled
 and no further units will be built. Engineers are working to derive 
technologies developed for the DDG-1000 series ships into a battery 
system so other warships can operate a railgun.
 Most current destroyers can spare only nine megawatts of additional 
electricity, while it would require 25 megawatts to propel a projectile 
to the desired maximum range  (i.e., to launch 32MJ projectiles at a rate of 10 shots per minute). Even if current ships, such as the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer,
 can be upgraded with enough electrical power to operate a railgun, the 
space taken up on the ships by the integration of an additional weapon 
system may force the removal of existing weapon systems to make room 
available. The first shipboard tests was to be from a railgun installed on an Spearhead-class expeditionary fast transport (EPF), but this was later changed to land based testing.
Though the 23 lb projectiles have no explosives, their Mach 7 
velocity gives them 32 megajoules of energy, but impact kinetic energy 
downrange will typically be 50 percent or less of the muzzle energy.  
The Navy is looking into other uses for railguns, besides land 
bombardment, such as air defense; with the right targeting systems, 
projectiles could intercept aircraft, cruise missiles, and even 
ballistic missiles. The Navy is also developing directed-energy weapons for air defense use, but it will be years or decades before they will be effective.
The railgun would be part of a Navy fleet that envisions future 
offensive and defensive capabilities being provided in layers:  lasers 
to provide close range defense, railguns to provide medium range attack 
and defense, and cruise missiles to provide long-range attack; though 
railguns will cover targets up to 100 miles away that previously needed a
 missile.
 The Navy may eventually enhance railgun technology to enable it to fire
 at a range of 200 nmi (230 mi; 370 km) and impact with 64 megajoules of
 energy. One shot would require 6 million amps of current, so it will 
take a long time to develop capacitors that can generate enough energy 
and strong enough gun materials.
The most promising near-term application for weapons-rated 
railguns and electromagnetic guns, in general, is probably aboard naval 
ships with sufficient spare electrical generating capacity and battery 
storage space.  In exchange, ship survivability may be enhanced through a
 comparable reduction in the quantities of potentially dangerous 
chemical propellants and explosives currently employed.  Ground combat 
forces, however, may find that co-locating an additional electrical 
power supply on the battlefield for every gun system may not be as 
weight and space efficient, survivable, or convenient a source of 
immediate projectile-launching energy as conventional propellants, which
 are currently manufactured safely behind the lines and delivered to the
 weapon, pre-packaged, through a robust and dispersed logistics system.
In July, 2017, Defensetech
 reported that the Navy wants to push the Office of Naval Research's 
prototype railgun from a science experiment into useful weapon 
territory. The goal, according to Tom Beutner,
 head of Naval Air Warfare and Weapons for the ONR, is ten shots per 
minute at 32 megajoules. A 32 megajoule railgun shot is equivalent to 
about 23,600,000 foot-pounds, so a single 32 MJ shot has the same muzzle
 energy as about 200,000 .22 rounds being fired simultaneously.
 In more conventional power units, a 32 MJ shot every 6 s is a net power
 of 5.3 MW (or 5300 kW). If the railgun is assumed to be 20% efficient 
at turning electrical energy into kinetic energy, the ship's electrical 
supplies will need to provide about 25 MW for as long as firing 
continues.
Army Research Laboratory
Research on railgun technology served as a major area of focus at the Ballistic Research Laboratory (BRL)
 throughout the 1980s. In addition to analyzing the performance and 
electrodynamic and thermodynamic properties of railguns at other 
institutions (like Maxwell Laboratories’ CHECMATE railgun), BRL procured their own railguns for study such as their one-meter railgun and their four-meter rail gun.
 In 1984, BRL researchers devised a technique to analyze the residue 
left behind on the bore surface after a shot was fired in order to 
investigate the cause of the bore's progressive degradation.
 In 1991, they determined the properties required for developing an 
effective launch package as well as the design criteria necessary for a 
railgun to incorporate finned, long rod projectiles.
Research into railguns continued after the Ballistic Research 
Laboratory was consolidated with six other independent Army laboratories
 to form the U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL) in 1992. One of the major projects in railgun research that ARL was involved in was the Cannon-Caliber Electromagnetic Gun (CCEMG) program, which took place at the Center for Electromechanics at the University of Texas (UT-CEM) and was sponsored by the U.S. Marine Corps and the U.S. Army Armament Research Development and Engineering Center.
 As part of the CCEMG program, UT-CEM designed and developed the 
Cannon-Caliber Electromagnetic Launcher, a rapid-fire railgun launcher, 
in 1995.
 Featuring a 30-mm roundbore, the launcher was capable of firing three, 
five-round salvos of 185-g launch packages at a muzzle velocity of 
1850 m/s and a firing rate of 5 Hz. Rapid-fire operation was achieved by
 driving the launcher with multiple 83544 peak pulses provided by the 
CCEMG compulsator. The CCEMG railgun included several features: ceramic 
sidewalls, directional preloading, and liquid cooling.
 ARL was responsible for assessing the performance of the launcher, 
which was tested at the ARL Transonic Experimental Facility in Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD.
The U.S. Army Research Laboratory also monitored electromagnetic 
and electrothermal gun technology development at the Institute for 
Advanced Technology (IAT) at the University of Texas at Austin,
 one of five university and industry laboratories that ARL federated to 
procure technical support. It housed the two electromagnetic launchers, 
the Leander OAT and the AugOAT, as well as the Medium Caliber Launcher. 
The facility also provided a power system that included thirteen 1- MJ 
capacitor banks, an assortment of electromagnetic launcher devices and 
diagnostic apparatuses. The focus of the research activity was on 
designs, interactions and materials required for electromagnetic 
launchers.
In 1999, a collaboration between ARL and IAT led to the 
development of a radiometric method of measuring the temperature 
distribution of railgun armatures during a pulsed electrical discharge 
without disturbing the magnetic field. In 2001, ARL became the first to obtain a set of accuracy data on electromagnetic gun-launched projectiles using jump tests.
 In 2004, ARL researchers published papers examining the interaction of 
high temperature plasmas for the purpose of developing efficient railgun
 igniters.
 Early papers describe the plasma-propellant interaction group at ARL 
and their attempts to understand and distinguish between the chemical, 
thermal, and radiation effect of plasmas on conventional solid 
propellants. Using scanning electron microscopy and other diagnostic 
techniques, they evaluated in detail the influence of plasmas on 
specific propellant materials.
People's Republic of China
China is developing its own railgun system. According to a CNBC
 report from U.S. intelligence, China's railgun system was first 
revealed in 2011, and ground testing began in 2014.  In 2015 when the 
weapon system gained the ability to strike over extended ranges with 
increased lethality.  The weapon system was successfully mounted on a Chinese Navy ship in December 2017, with sea trials happening later.
In early February 2018, pictures of what is claimed to be a 
Chinese railgun were published online.  In the pictures the gun is 
mounted on the bow of a Type 072III-class landing ship Haiyangshan.  Media suggests that the system is or soon will be ready for testing.  In March 2018, it was reported that China confirmed it had begun testing its electromagnetic rail gun at sea.
India
In November 2017, India's Defence Research and Development Organisation
 carried out a successful test of a 12 mm square bore electromagnetic 
railgun. Tests of a 30 mm version are planned to be conducted. India 
aims to fire a one kilogram projectile at a velocity of more than 2,000 
meters per second using a capacitor bank of 10 megajoules.
Issues
Major difficulties
Major technological and operational hurdles must be overcome before railguns can be deployed:
- Railgun durability: To date, railgun demonstrations, while impressive, have not demonstrated an ability to fire multiple full power shots from the same set of rails. The United States Navy has claimed hundreds of shots from the same set of rails. In a March 2014 statement to the Intelligence, Emerging Threats and Capabilities Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee, Chief of Naval Research Admiral Matthew Klunder stated, "Barrel life has increased from tens of shots to over 400, with a program path to achieve 1000 shots." However, the Office of Naval Research (ONR) will not confirm that the 400 shots are full-power shots. Further, there is nothing published to indicate there are any high megajoule-class railguns with the capability of firing hundreds of full-power shots while staying within the strict operational parameters necessary to fire railgun shots accurately and safely. Railguns should be able to fire 6 rounds per minute with a rail life of about 3000 rounds, tolerating launch accelerations of tens of thousands of g's, extreme pressures and megaampere currents, however this is not feasible with current technology.
 - Projectile guidance: A future capability critical to fielding a real railgun weapon is developing a robust guidance package that will allow the railgun to fire at distant targets or to hit incoming missiles. Developing such a package is a real challenge. The U.S. Navy's RFP Navy SBIR 2012.1 – Topic N121-102
 - for developing such a package gives a good overview of just how challenging railgun projectile guidance is:
 
The package must fit within the mass (< 2 kg), diameter (< 40 mm outer diameter), and volume (200 cm3) constraints of the projectile and do so without altering the center of gravity. It should also be able to survive accelerations of at least 20,000 g (threshold) / 40,000 g (objective) in all axes, high electromagnetic fields (E > 5,000 V/m, B > 2 T), and surface temperatures of > 800 deg C. The package should be able to operate in the presence of any plasma that may form in the bore or at the muzzle exit and must also be radiation hardened due to exo-atmospheric flight. Total power consumption must be less than 8 watts (threshold)/5 watts (objective) and the battery life must be at least 5 minutes (from initial launch) to enable operation during the entire engagement. In order to be affordable, the production cost per projectile must be as low as possible, with a goal of less than $1,000 per unit.
On June 22, 2015, General Atomics’ Electromagnetic Systems announced 
that projectiles with on-board electronics survived the whole railgun 
launch environment and performed their intended functions in four 
consecutive tests on June 9 and 10 June at the U.S. Army's Dugway 
Proving Ground in Utah. The on-board electronics successfully measured 
in-bore accelerations and projectile dynamics, for several kilometers 
downrange, with the integral data link continuing to operate after the 
projectiles impacted the desert floor, which is essential for precision 
guidance.
Trigger for inertial confinement fusion
Plasma railguns are used in Physics research and they have been explored as a potential trigger mechanism of magneto-inertial fusion. However, plasma railguns are very different from solid mass drivers or weapons, and they only share the basic operational concept.