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    Sandia Labs engineers create 'self-guided' bullet

    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Figuring out how to pack a processor and other electronics into a machine gun bullet has been a challenge for engineers at Sandia National Laboratories, so weapons experts say the miniature guidance system the lab has developed is a breakthrough.

    Three years in the making, the bullet prototype represents another step toward a next-generation battlefield that scientists and experts expect to be saturated with technology and information.

    "In the laboratory, I'm able to make machines so incredibly small it kind of boggles my mind," said Red Jones, one of the Sandia researchers who helped develop the laser-guided .50-caliber bullet. "Where we're headed, we're going to be limited only by our imagination."

    Developing more precise weaponry has been a mission for government and industry scientists for decades. Most recently, the research arm of the U.S. Department of Defense has awarded tens of millions of dollars in contracts to companies to develop guided ammunition for snipers and special scopes that account for crosswinds and other environmental variables.

    The idea behind Sandia Labs' bullet is rooted more in the M2, a belt-fed machine gun that became standard issue in the U.S. Army nearly 80 years ago. Pairing the M2 with the guided bullet would allow soldiers to hit their mark faster and with precision.

    At 4 inches long and a half-inch in diameter, the bullet directs itself like a tiny guided missile and can hit a target more than a mile away.

    It's designed to twist and turn, making up to 30 corrections per second.

    "Everybody thought it was too difficult to make things small enough. We knew we could deal with that. The other thing was it was going to be too complicated and expensive," he said. "We came up with an innovative way around that to make it stupid and cheap and still pretty good."

    Jones and his fellow researchers had initial success testing the design in computer simulations and in field tests of prototypes, built from commercially available parts.

    With most of the hard science done, Jones said the next step is for Sandia to partner with a private company to complete testing of the prototype and bring a guided bullet to the marketplace.

    More than $1 million in research and development grants have taken the project this far.

    Computer simulations showed an unguided bullet under real-world conditions could miss a target more than a half mile away by nearly 10 yards. But according to the patent, a guided bullet would get within eight inches.

    The design for the bullet includes an optical sensor 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. The actuators steer the fins that guide the bullet.

    Jones said there are still some engineering problems to be sorted out that will make the bullet more practical — for example, it will have to be tough enough to be dropped off the back of a truck and still work.

    Even more innovation is needed for the manufacturing process.

    "What we want to do is make it cheap enough to make it cost effective for the military to use in a machine gun," he said. "It's not going to be millions of dollars, but it's not going to be a buck a piece either."

    The technology has captured the interest of weapons experts, both for the successful miniaturization of guidance systems that are usually reserved for missiles and for the potential benefits of precision.

    "All of a sudden now you've got a way to eliminate the collateral damage issues. From that perspective, this starts to get interesting," said Adam Firestone, an Army veteran, instructor and a weapons system engineer.

    Firestone and other experts said the battlefield of the future will surely include more capabilities for guiding bullets and bombs, but what will make the difference will be communication improvements and intelligence sharing systems that take advantage of the high-tech weapons while linking each soldier together.

    Defense department researchers and contractors are already developing flying nano-bots that can stream live video, contact lenses that would allow soldiers to focus simultaneously on virtual digital images and their surroundings, and smartphone apps that help with tactical operations.

    "Where we're going is to a world where the individual soldier, Marine, sailor or airman lives in a bath of knowledge. The world would be surreal in the original sense of super real. When you look at something, you see what you need to see when you need to see it," Firestone said. "They will have the ability to make decisions more accurately and that will have a significant impact."

    ___

    Follow Susan Montoya Bryan on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/susanmbryanNM

     
    • JT  •  Livingston, New Jersey  •  3 mths ago
      nano-bots, what could they possibly do?

      The heavy concrete silo lid suddenly shoved open. A mere moment later, the Minuteman III erupted to life, a sheet of flame and exhaust coming out of the silo along with the rising missile itself.

      Just as it was clearing the pad, with the nozzle no higher than the fence around it, camouflaged, a cloud of waiting nano-bots attached, having flown out of the buffalograss and sage around the site, at the sound of the lid moving.

      The bot charges, a mixture of thermite and high explosive, instantly bored holes through the thin skin of the ICBM's first stage. Jets of fire from widening holes condemned the climbing missile to a death spiral, arcing it into the ground. An expanding fireball rose and turned greenish black. The high explosives had exploded, the nuclear fuel burned.

      All over the field, missiles launched were destroyed. There was no telling if any could be launched. At US bases in the mainland and around the world, B-52, B-1, and B-2 bombers were thus similarly neutralized. Half the Trident boomers were no longer in communication, and could not be raised. Crews in the remainder wondered how, and if there was time, to search examine their missiles to make sure they were launchable, and scoured their ships for evidence of anything out of the ordinary which might have gotten in unnoticed.

      With a weapon system costing only in the millions, the Red Army had neutralized most of the Strategic Triad. The President's advisers debated the options, with retaliatory capacity broken.
      • lori 3 mths ago
        are you okay?
      • JT 3 mths ago
        Of course. Just providing an example of what nanobots can do.
      • alpcats 3 mths ago
        great stuff , u write or is it from a story?
    • mike  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      it's about time, this should make the battlefield a much safer place
      • charmonium5 3 mths ago
        a Safe Battlefield....now there is an oxymoron
      • David 3 mths ago
        Not for the target.
        But in the modern battlefield where the enemy combatants are mixed in with combatants precision aiming makes it more likely fewer noncombatants will be hit.
      • shadow man 3 mths ago
        Wait untill they put atomic war heads in 30 or 50 cal. shells.
    • Lee  •  3 mths ago
      Now if only our politicians learned that the best way to win a war was to avoid fighting one.
    • Bill  •  Niles, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      I had to laugh at one part of this article. Making the bullet tough enough to be dropped off the back of a truck and still work. For pity sake, if the #$%$ thing can survive being fired from a machine gun it must be pretty tough to start with!
    • Tony  •  3 mths ago
      Gimme Back My Bullets
      Lynyrd Skynyrd
    • bigjohnson  •  Kalamazoo, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      Iran probably already has a copy of it sitting beside our drone.
    • Earl Swagger  •  3 mths ago
      Congrats. Now how about finding a cure for cancer.
    • Mat  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      King Koopa did this YEARS ago!
    • Sonny  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Wonder just what would happen if we were to pour equal amounts of capital into finding ways to help humanity better survive in today's technological world as we do in technology to destroy it?
      • Wile E. Coyote--Supergeni ... 3 mths ago
        "When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will be at peace." -- Jimi Hendrix, two-tour Vietnam Vet.
      • MacTheEye 3 mths ago
        Amen, Wile E. 2 tours also. Peace.
    • charmonium5  •  Fullerton, California  •  3 mths ago
      Military R&D may sometimes be misguided and often is wasteful. After all it is the Gov and Corp Welfare that does the work. However their HAVE been many benefits and technological breakthroughs as a result.
      War has been a human frailty since time immemorial and was once fought with sticks and stones. Modern warfare is both more humane and more awful. Let us believe that we are evolving out of the tendency to fight violently among our selves as nations. The Global Economy makes such cataclysmic wars as WWI & II unlikely, it just isn't too anyone's advantage when they each have vested interest everywhere on the map.
      • butch.miner 3 mths ago
        DARPA-part of the Army is a disappointment to Mr Gore-d they developed the first networked machines. The Military developed the cogulant made from shrimp now used in bleeding accidents as well as on the battle field. War has been the basis for major medical advances. Emergency surgeries in the field defined many new techniques as well as personal safety.
        Ya ther have been some massive blunders, the SGT York for one, but no advance in anything is not without its falures.
        the postit notes- was an attempt by a researcher to make a permanent bonding glue..go figure.
    • glass maker  •  3 mths ago
      Now if they could just make the processor survive the G-force it takes to get a bullet a mile away.
    • GarySi  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 mths ago
      In the early days of integrated circuits and microprocessors and multi-layer circuit boards and such, the United States had a technology advantage over the rest of the world.
      An advantage over folks like the USSR and Communist China.

      Then Nixon opened channels of communication and industry with China.
      Today, people commit suicide at the Foxxcon factory, when they aren't making state-of-the-art electronics control boards for Apple and other computer businesses.

      What I am saying is, it will be a matter of years or months before China has this technology.

      About that time, inexpensive Chinese-made versions of this technology will be made available to local police working for the Federal War on Drugs Nixon started.
    • MacTheEye  •  3 mths ago
      Kill! War! War! Kill! Kill! Kill! War! Kill! War! War! Kill! Kill! War! War! Kill! Kill! Kill! War! Kill! War! War! Kill! Kill! War! War! Kill! Kill! Kill! War! Kill! War! War! Kill! Kill! War! War! Kill! Kill! Kill! War! Kill! War! War! Kill! Sickening.
    • Ralph  •  3 mths ago
      fine use of money!!!!
    • Ryan  •  Macon, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      With this news, another company is now developing a device you can put atop a car or on a helmet that throws led laser beams in multiple directions and elevations to throw off laser guided bullets.

      In 25 years we will have two soldiers shooting at each other 25 yards apart and neither can hit the other because of their dependance on technology.
    • Beast  •  Killeen, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      What I don't get is if the target must be "painted" with a laser, then why doesn't the guy aiming the laser just shoot the guy. Now a pre-programmable bullet would be cool, lose the laser sighting and just punch in coordinance where you want it to go and let it fly. That would be worth it. As far as the contacts thing. Maybe glasses but contacts are not permitted on the battle field because they can melt to your eye, so another waste of time if the info is correct.
    • Paul  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      If it save a US Soldiers life - it's worth it...
    • scott  •  3 mths ago
      Awesome sniper ammo.
    • budak  •  New York, New York  •  3 mths ago
      The best tool in a conflict is a tool that can stop arm conflict from starting at the first place and to halt & to defuse the ongoing one. Why don't DOD spend the money on that research?
    • bob  •  3 mths ago
      Every persons DNA emits a certain frequency,that frequency is printed in top secret files, you type in that frequency on your weapon, aim into the sky, pull yhe trigger, sit back and have a beer.
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