A flammable gas lit in a jar, then poured out on the floor. It burns so fast and has a low temperature so it doesn't affect anthing in the room. I would guess methane with a 4-10% concentration.
I mean the way they explained it sounded like it made sense, and it's not like i was gonna just jump on the computer as soon as I got home hours later in order to fact check
Yes if you keep your projectile in your railgun for a long enough time without speeding it up or actually shooting it it will melt at one point. But thats not what railguns do you ******* moron.
lel dumle is 4 dumble le dumb HAHAHHA XDDDD wat an fagit -_- I gonna get alot of dislikes of this, because *********** are only for faggots. And I am a faggot right now.
No, look at the coil, it loops around and comes back. Normally it would work as a rail gun, but because the coil reverses on itself, it's trying to fire both ways. Naturally this causes it to **** up.
Stop talking about **** you yourself admit you never researched. That's the worst kind of person, worse than someone who brings a ******* trolley into the express lane.
Dude I'm pretty sure "autism is caused by vaccines" is worse because thinking railguns don't work doesn't harm anyone.
Except apparently your feelings.
The principle this works on, for those wondering, is the concept of Eddy Currents. When you pass a current through this coil(called a solenoid) it induces a magnetic field within the solenoid. The metal aligns with that magnetic field. What else I assume is going on here is that the current being passed through the solenoid is being decreased. And this is where the really interesting part is - Faraday's Law. Nature doesn't like changes in magnetic fields and will create it's own to negate that time rate of change. Thus, the metal bar inside has it's owned current spiraling within it to induce it's own magnetic field. That's an Eddy Current. Although metal bars have very little electrical resistance. they have a bit. When a current goes through a resistor, it generates heat. Thus the metal bar heats up and melts.
Building on your argument, the most likely reason why such a change in current through the solenoid can be sustained until the metal melts is because it is attached to an AC generator. The rapid changes in strength of the magnetic field within the solenoid can easily be attributed to the constant change in current from the AC supply.
i get this horrible sinking feeling everytime i look at that gif because i keep imagining a person being thrown in there
but otherwise i assume it would be quite satisfying...