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Дата 20.08.2002 22:18:41 Найти в дереве
Рубрики Современность; Спецслужбы; Версия для печати

Имел ли мест сей факт действительно ?

Добрый день,


Имеется в виду "иампочковый эффект" на гаваях. Уж очень "дуболомно" его описание (в тексте выделено)

Спасибо.

PS. - Есть ли в сети документы, отвечающие указанному случаю?




E-Bomb May See First
Combat Use In Iraq
8-9-2


Weapons designed to attack electronic systems and not people could see their first
combat use in any military attack on Iraq.

It is widely believed that the US is planning for an attack that could overthrow
Iraq's leader, Saddam Hussein, who it believes is developing weapons of mass
destruction. The Iraqi president responded publicly for the first time on Thursday,
exhorting Iraqis to be prepared "with all the force you can to face your enemies".

US intelligence reports indicate that key elements of the Iraqi war machine are
located in heavily-fortified underground facilities or beneath civilian buildings such
as hospitals. This means the role of non-lethal and precision weapons would be a
critical factor in any conflict.

High Power Microwave (HPM) devices are designed to destroy electronic
equipment in command, control, communications and computer targets and are
available to the US military. They produce an electromagnetic field of such
intensity that their effect can be far more devastating than a lighting strike.





Pumped flux


***********вот-это******************

The effect exploited by HPM weapons was accidentally demonstrated in the
1950s when street lights in Hawaii were knocked out by the electromagnetic pulse
produced by high altitude nuclear tests.
***********вот-это******************






One unclassified approach to producing the required pulse is a device called an
Explosive Pumped Flux Generator. In this a charged bank of capacitors energises a
coil wrapped around a copper tube, which itself contains high explosives.

On detonation, the explosives expand the tube from the back and moves rapidly
forward, forcing the tube to make progressive contact with the coil and causing a
short circuit. This has the effect of crushing the magnetic field at the same time as
reducing the coil's inductance.

The resultant spike lasts tens to hundreds of microseconds and can produce peak
currents of tens of millions of Amps and peak energies of tens of millions of
Joules. By comparison, a typical lighting strike produces around 30,000 Amps.

Single use

HPM weapons would be single-use and could be delivered on almost any a cruise
missile or unmanned aircraft. Future devices are likely to be re-usable.

Military planners will be particularly interested in claimed ability of HPM weapon's
to penetrate bunkers buried deep underground by using service pipes, cables or
ducts to transmit the spike. Insulating equipment from such spikes, for example by
using Faraday cages, is believed to be very difficult and expensive.

Another weapon that targets electronic equipment has already seen use in the
Balkan conflicts of the 1990s. Blackout bombs, such as the formerly classified
BLU-114/B, releases a spider's web of fine carbon filaments into the air above
electrical distribution infrastructures. This causes short circuits when the filaments
touch the ground.

Tomahawk cruise missiles fitted with warheads operating on similar lines attacked
the Iraqi power grid during the 1990 Gulf war.

David Windle