Scientists and engineers at Picatinny Arsenal are busy developing a device that will shoot lightning bolts down laser beams to destroy its target. The Laser-Induced Plasma Channel, or LIPC, is designed to take out targets that conduct electricity better than the air or ground that surrounds them.
"If a laser beam is intense enough, its electro-magnetic field is strong enough to rip electrons off of air molecules, creating plasma," said Fischer. "This plasma is located along the path of the laser beam, so we can direct it wherever we want by moving a mirror. The plasma channel conducts electricity way better than un-ionized air, so if we set up the laser so that the filament comes near a high voltage source, the electrical energy will travel down the filament."
A target, an enemy vehicle or even some types of unexploded ordnance, would be a better conductor than the ground it sits on. Since the voltage drop across the target would be the same as the voltage drop across the same distance of ground, current flows through the target. In the case of unexploded ordnance, it would detonate, explained Fischer.
They fired it at a car? They should fire it at a Mazda. So, a Mazda gets struck by lightning and is destroyed. Wouldn't that be great? They are so ugly. (I read on an interforum somewhere that a Mazda got struck by lightning before and that it did not survive.)
also, it was mazda's dad, and he didn't actually get struck by lightning, he just tried to fix the roof during a storm, which is still retarded, but not as retarded as it could have been
Technically, this isn't a lightning gun, but a plasma gun. They use plasma to create a channel for the lightning bolt to move through and since lightning itself is indeed plasma this weapon is therefore a plasma gun.
GONNAFISTYA wrote:Technically, this isn't a lightning gun, but a plasma gun. They use plasma to create a channel for the lightning bolt to move through and since lightning itself is indeed plasma this weapon is therefore a plasma gun.