Retro reflective tracer ammunition, and related systems and methods
09739585 · 2017-08-22
Inventors
- Thomas J Nugent, Jr. (Bellevue, WA, US)
- Elizabeth Nugent (Bellevue, WA, US)
- Nicholas R Burrows (Seattle, WA, US)
- Carsten Erickson (Kent, WA, US)
- David J Bashford (Kent, WA, US)
Cpc classification
F42B5/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F42B10/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F42B12/38
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A projectile includes a component that is highly reflective and configured to reveal the projectile's trajectory when the projectile is fired from a gun and electromagnetic radiation is directed toward the projectile. With the reflective component, one can more easily limit the visibility of the projectile to areas from where the projectile was fired because the reflective component is passive, not active. As the projectile moves down range, the areas behind the projectile are typically where a shooter and/or spotter for the shooter are located, not where an enemy combatant is located. Thus, the trajectory of the projectile is revealed to the people who can use the information to adjust their fire, and remains hidden from the people who could use the information to locate the shooter.
Claims
1. A projectile comprising: a component that is highly reflective and configured to reveal the projectile's trajectory when the projectile is fired from a gun and electromagnetic radiation is directed toward the projectile; and a protective component, that covers propellant that fires the projectile from a gun, and that protects the highly reflective component from damage while the projectile leaves a gun when the projectile is fired from the gun.
2. The projectile of claim 1 wherein the highly reflective component includes a retroreflector.
3. The projectile of claim 2 wherein the retroreflector includes at least one of the following: a corner reflector, a cat eye reflector, and a phase conjugate reflector.
4. The projectile of claim 1 wherein the projectile includes: a body having a region that leaves the gun last when the projectile is fired from a gun, and the highly reflective component is located at the region of the body.
5. The projectile of claim 1 wherein the projectile includes a body and the highly reflective component is fastened to the body.
6. The projectile of claim 2 wherein the projectile includes: a body, and tape that includes the retroreflector, and adheres to the body.
7. The projectile of claim 2 wherein the projectile includes: a body having a surface, and the retroreflector is embossed on the surface.
8. The projectile of claim 1 wherein the projectile includes a body that is a solid mass of metal.
9. A cartridge for propelling a projectile out of a gun when the cartridge is fired, the cartridge comprising: a casing; a projectile held by the casing, and that includes a component that is highly reflective and configured to reveal the projectile's trajectory when the projectile is fired from a gun and electromagnetic radiation is directed toward the projectile; a protective component to protect the highly reflective component from damage while the projectile leaves the casing when the cartridge is fired; and a propellant held by the casing, and configured to urge the projectile away from the casing when the cartridge is fired.
10. The cartridge of claim 9 wherein the highly reflective component includes a retroreflector.
11. The cartridge of claim 9 wherein the protective component includes a wax disposed between the projectile and the propellant.
12. The cartridge of claim 9 wherein the protective component includes a sabot.
13. The cartridge of claim 9 wherein the protective component includes a disk disposed between the projectile and the propellant.
14. The cartridge of claim 9 further comprising a plurality of projectiles, each including a component that is highly reflective.
15. A system for revealing a projectile's trajectory when the projectile is fired from a gun, the system comprising: a projectile including a component that is highly reflective; a protective component that covers propellant that fires the projectile from a gun and that protects the highly reflective component from damage while the projectile leaves the gun; an illuminator configured to generate electromagnetic radiation and to direct the electromagnetic radiation toward the projectile while the projectile moves away from the gun that fired the projectile; and wherein the highly reflective component of the projectile is configured to reflect some of the electromagnetic radiation from the illuminator back in a direction from which the projectile came to reveal the projectile's trajectory.
16. The system of claim 15 wherein the component that is highly reflective includes a retroreflector.
17. The system of claim 15 wherein the illuminator generates one or more of the following: visible light, near infrared light, and a laser beam.
18. A method for revealing the trajectory of a projectile that is fired from a gun, the method comprising: protecting, with a protective component that covers propellant that fires the projectile from a gun, a highly reflective component of a projectile while the projectile leaves a gun that fired the projectile; directing electromagnetic radiation toward the projectile while the projectile moves away from the gun; reflecting, with the highly reflective component of the projectile, a portion of the electromagnetic radiation; and sensing a portion of the electromagnetic radiation reflected by the highly reflective component.
19. The method of claim 18 wherein reflecting a portion of the electromagnetic radiation includes reflecting the portion with a retroreflector.
20. The method of claim 18 wherein sensing a portion of the reflected electromagnetic radiation includes a shooter of the projectile sensing a portion of the reflected electromagnetic radiation.
21. The projectile of claim 1 wherein the protective component includes a wax coating.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8)
(9) With the highly reflective component 26, one can more easily limit the visibility of the projectile 24 to areas from where the projectile 24 was fired because the highly reflective component 26 of the projectile is passive, not active. As the projectile 24 moves down range, the areas behind the projectile are typically where a shooter and/or spotter for the shooter are located, not where an enemy combatant is located. Thus, the trajectory of the projectile is revealed to the people who can use the information to adjust their fire, and remains hidden from the people who could use the information to locate the shooter. Specifically, an enemy combatant would not know where to direct electromagnetic radiation to cause a reflection to reveal the trajectory of the projectile 24. Active components generate electromagnetic radiation and emit the radiation perpendicular as well as parallel to the projectile's trajectory, and thus reveal the trajectory to many people other than the shooter.
(10) The illuminator 28 (discussed in greater detail in conjunction with
(11) The illuminator 28 also may direct the electromagnetic radiation in any desired form. For example, in this and other embodiments the illuminator 28 collimates the electromagnetic radiation into a laser beam. By doing this, much of the electromagnetic radiation is directed at the projectile 24 which allows the highly reflective component 26 to reflect enough of the electromagnetic radiation back to the shooter and/or spotter to allow the shooter and/or spotter to easily sense or see the reflection especially over a long distance.
(12) Other embodiments are possible. For example, the illuminator 28 may generate electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, radio wave, ultraviolet, and or x-ray spectrum. Also, the illuminator 28 may direct the electromagnetic radiation without collimating it, such as a flashlight that generates visible light.
(13) Still referring to
(14) Other embodiments are possible. For example, the highly reflective component 26 may include a highly polished flat surface or facet, such as a mirror, of the projectile 24 capable of reflecting a very high percentage of the electromagnetic radiation that it receives back toward the gun 22 without much diffusion or scattering. Unlike a retroreflector, though, if the projectile wobbles or tumbles during flight much of the electromagnetic radiation received by the highly reflective component 26 will not be reflected back to the shooter, but elsewhere.
(15) In operation, a shooter may fire multiple projectiles from the gun 22 of which one or more may be a projectile 24 that includes the highly reflective component 26. In this and other embodiments, as the shooter fires the projectiles that do not include the highly reflective component 26, the illuminator 28 remains “off”, that is, does not generate electromagnetic radiation and does not direct the radiation toward each projectile as each travels down range. Then, as the shooter fires the projectile 24 that does include a highly reflective component 26, the illuminator 28 is turned “on”, that is, does generate electromagnetic radiation 30 and does direct the radiation 30 toward the projectile 24 as the projectile 24 travels down range. Some of the radiation 30 reaches the highly reflective component 26 of the projectile 24 and is reflected back toward the shooter. Some of the reflected radiation 32 is then seen or sensed by the shooter. To track the trajectory of the projectile 24, and thus infer the trajectory of the other projectiles previously fired, the shooter observes the movement of the reflected radiation 32.
(16)
(17) The first retroreflector 40 is a corner reflector. The corner reflector 40 includes three reflecting surfaces two of which are labeled 44a and 44b, respectively, and the third of which has been omitted for clarity. In three dimensions, the three surfaces intersect to form a corner 46, and thus the third surface lies parallel to the page on which
(18) The second retroreflector 42 is a cat-eye reflector. The cat-eye reflector 42 includes a refracting element 54, typically a glass sphere, and a reflective surface 56, typically a spherical mirror, located at the focal surface of the refractive element 54. When electromagnetic radiation 58a hits the refracting element 54, the radiation 58a is refracted toward the reflective surface 56. When the refracted radiation 58b hits the surface 56, the surface reflects the radiation back toward the source of the radiation. When the reflected radiation 58c leaves the refracting element 54, the radiation 58c is refracted. The refracted radiation 58d travels back toward the source of the radiation 58a in a direction parallel to the direction that the radiation 58a travels. Similarly, the electromagnetic radiation 60a traveling to the cat-eye reflector 42 is refracted by the element 54; then reflected by the surface 56; and then refracted back toward the source of the radiation in a direction parallel to the direction that the radiation 60a travels. The angle that each wave of radiation 58a and 60a enters the refractive element 54 is different yet the cat-eye reflector 42 refracts and reflects each back toward its respective source in a direction parallel to its respective incoming radiation 58a and 60a.
(19) Still referring to
(20) Other embodiments are possible. For example, the highly reflective component 26 may include a phase-conjugate retroreflector.
(21)
(22) In these and other embodiments, the highly reflective component 26 may be located as desired on the respective bodies 72 and 76. For example, the body 72 of the projectile 70 includes a region 78 that is the rear of the projectile, i.e., that leaves the gun last when gun fires the projectile 70; and the highly reflective component 26 covers the region 78. In other embodiments of the projectile 70, the highly reflective component 26 may be located on the side 80, a portion of the side 80, the front 82 of the projectile's body 74, and/or a portion of the front 82, in addition to or in lieu of being located on the rear region 78. In this and other embodiments of the projectile 74, each of the bodies 76 may be completely covered by a highly reflective component 26. In other embodiments of the projectile 74, one or more of the bodies may be completely or partially covered by a highly reflective component 26.
(23) In these and other embodiments, the highly reflective component 26 may be fastened as desired to the bodies 72 and 76 of the projectiles 70 and 74, respectively. For example, in these and other embodiments the highly reflective component 26 includes a tape that has a retroreflector and adheres to the region 78 of the projectile 70 or to each body 76 of the projectile 74. In other embodiments, the highly reflective component 26 may be embossed on the respective bodies 72 and 76 of the projectiles 70 and 74. In such embodiments, the embossed structure may be plated with a very reflective metal to increase the component's reflectivity.
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(26) The protective component 102 may be any desired structure capable of performing this function. For example, the protective component 102 may include a wax coating 106 that isolates the highly reflective component 104 from propellant in a casing of a cartridge (discussed in greater detail in conjunction with
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(28) Although the cartridge 120 shown is configured for use in a handgun, the cartridge 120 may be configured as desired to be fired from any gun, such as a rifle, shotgun, or cannon.
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(30) The illuminator 138 may include any desired control circuitry and components to control one or more functions of the illuminator 138. For example, in this and other embodiments the illuminator 138 includes circuitry for causing the illuminator 138 to generate electromagnetic radiation when triggered as desired. In addition, the illuminator 138 also includes circuitry for causing the illuminator 138 to stop generating electromagnetic radiation when triggered as desired. Here, the illuminator 138 may be triggered to generate electromagnetic radiation when the control circuitry senses the firing of the gun. This may be accomplished by sensing the muzzle flash, noise, or acceleration of the gun upon firing the gun. To stop generating electromagnetic radiation, the control circuitry may be triggered by the passage of a predetermined period. The period may be adjustable to account for different ballistics and/or different range conditions. To avoid blinding the shooter from the reflection of a projectile that is very close to the gun, i.e., just starting down range, the illuminator's control circuitry may delay causing the illuminator 138 to generate electromagnetic radiation after the circuitry senses a firing event.
(31) Other embodiments are possible. For example, the illuminator 138 may include control circuitry that modifies the intensity of the electromagnetic radiation it generates to reduce the brightness of the projectile's reflection when the projectile is very close to the gun. As another example, the illuminator may pulse (on/off) the electromagnetic radiation many times, such as thirty, while the projectile travels down range to reduce the brightness of the projectile's reflection.