N.M. engineers create ‘self-guided’ missile

ALBUQUERQUE – Sandia National Laboratories engineers have invented a bullet that directs itself to a target as a tiny guided missile and can hit a target more than a mile away.

Sandia Labs engineers, said the bullet twists and turns to guide itself toward a laser-directed point. It can make up to 30 corrections per second while in the air, officials said during an announcement last week.

Sandia technical staff member Jim Jones said he thinks the .50-caliber bullets would work well with military machine guns, so soldiers could hit their mark faster and with precision.

“We’ve tested gunpowders to see if we can get muzzle velocity for military interest,” Jones told KRQE-TV. “We’ve tested various electronic components to see if they would survive the launch.”

Testing has shown the bullet can reach speeds of 2,400 feet per second. Researchers said they were confident the bullet could reach standard-military speeds using customized gunpowder.

Computer simulations showed an unguided bullet under real-world conditions could miss a target more than a half mile away. But according to the patent, a guided bullet would arrive within 8 inches.

Sandia Labs is seeking a private company partner to complete testing of the prototype and bring a guided bullet to the marketplace. Research and development grants have taken the project this far.

Researchers have had initial success testing the design in computer simulations and in field tests of prototypes, built from commercially available parts, Jones said.

Sandia Labs said the design for the 4-inch-long bullet includes an optical sensor in the nose 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. These actuators steer tiny fins that guide the bullet to the target.

Sandia Labs said potential customers for the bullet could include the military, law enforcement and recreational shooters.

A time-exposure, a light-emitting diode, or LED, attached to a self-guided bullet at Sandia National Laboratories shows a bright path during a nighttime field test. The New Mexico-based lab says its engineers have invented a bullet that can hit a target more than a mile away. Enlargephoto

Courtesy of Sandia National Laboratories/Associate

A time-exposure, a light-emitting diode, or LED, attached to a self-guided bullet at Sandia National Laboratories shows a bright path during a nighttime field test. The New Mexico-based lab says its engineers have invented a bullet that can hit a target more than a mile away.