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Plasma weaponry is a staple of science fiction, but is often objected to on the basis that it expands too readily. There's no way to effectively deliver it to a target without spending a lot of effort of containment.

This is inspired by this question which describes two directed energy weapon systems, with the second one originally labeled plasma, then struck through and labeled ball lightning, silicon vapor theory.

The part I'm most interested in is how you'd actually create and throw the ball lightning. Firearms use a chamber and barrel, lasers use a lasing medium and lenses, railguns use capacitors and, well, rails. If I was building an infantry weapon that fires ball lightning, what would its main mechanical parts be?

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    $\begingroup$ Ball lightning is a ball of plasma, so it's plasma guns firing slower projectiles I guess. I wanna see if anyone has a vision more interesting than mine, though. $\endgroup$ Commented Apr 11, 2019 at 23:55
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    $\begingroup$ @Renan Yeah, the fact that ball lightning has been observed to last for more than a split second makes me hopeful that there's novel ideas about the generation and throwing parts of the weapon, while most posts about plasma focus on the containment aspect. Plus, it's a little exotic and that's always good for a scifi gun. $\endgroup$
    – TomatoCo
    Commented Apr 12, 2019 at 0:02
  • $\begingroup$ @JBH Sorry, I thought those questions went hand-in-hand with how often form follows function in engineering. I'll tweak it slightly so there's just one question. $\endgroup$
    – TomatoCo
    Commented Apr 12, 2019 at 15:55
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    $\begingroup$ That's perfect. +1. $\endgroup$
    – JBH
    Commented Apr 12, 2019 at 16:07

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We did it in the 1990's.

A railgun firing a plasmak (ball lightning) that is. Since the plasma is electrically conductive you can use it as both the armature and projectile. Muzzle velocity is insanely high, the projectile hits pretty hard just due to the speed, and as the plasmak impacts an object and is destroyed it releases a localized EMP - so the Star Wars ion cannon was actually not that far off. The big drawback is that the ball lightning disintegrates in a pathetically short distance in atmosphere, the structure is too unstable. In space however, you could get more respectable range out of this type of weapon.

Use a rail gun where one rail is an inner cone and the other rail is the outer cone. A donut of plasma between the cones acts as the armature/projectile. As it's forced out, it forms a stable(ish) structure called a field-reversed configuration which works exactly like a smoke ring - it's rotating about it's axis and rotating so that the inside of the ring moves forward and around to become the outside of the ring. This semi-stable plasma ball is ball lightning.

See also:

MARAUDER the Air Force Research Lab railgun plasma weapon.

General Fusion's Plasma Injectors (the largest in the world) use the same type of design. Definitely check out this paper as it breaks down the basic design. Their research library is full of all kinds of cool stuff.

This one is a bit different, but is also a type of plasma weapon. The US Army used a pulsed laser to create an ionized path in the air and paired it with a tesla coil. Lightning follows the path of least resistance through the air, so paint a target with the laser then blast it with lightning!

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  • $\begingroup$ The plasmoids emitted in this particular case aren't the same as ball lightning... the marauder fired plasmoids as something like 1000km/s so they could hit a distant target before they expanded too much and became weak and diffuse or simply popped when their field strength became too low. Ball lightning is apparently more stable, so I'm assuming that it isn't quite the same thing. $\endgroup$ Commented Apr 12, 2019 at 7:59
  • $\begingroup$ @StarfishPrime Fair enough. I don't think anyone knows what ball lightning really is. Best guesses are that it is some sort of self stabilizing plasma structure similar to the FRC's we've been able to create. But yeah, the hang time of naturally occurring ball lightning is a lot higher and no one knows why. $\endgroup$
    – MParm
    Commented Apr 13, 2019 at 20:31
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The Gungan method to launch ball lightning, or "boomas", is via catapult.

ball lightning catapult https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Gungan_energy_catapult

The boomas seem to be ball lightning, plus goo.

The booma consisted of blue plasma from the depths of Naboo's oceanic core, pressurized and forced into a shell that would burst if thrown hard enough. It was very effective against droids and vehicles because the plasma was electrified, and seemed to have the properties of an EMP weapon. It could also burn biological material and leave a trail of plasma "goo" upon impact.

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Nobody knows exactly how ball lightning works but the explanation that makes the most sense to me is air compressed and contained by the constructive interference of microwaves. It's already proven that a laser particle beam hybrid does not diverge. Totally ignores the inverse square law. The particles are pushed and contained by photons while the photons reflect and refract off the particles.

Ball lightning is like this but with microwaves.

So for a directed energy weapon. Start with a high pressure plasma torch. Then inductively accelerate it and inject it into a rapidly made ball lightning at the tip of the barrel. The ball lightning is stable for a few seconds and the conservation of momentum from the accelerated plasma gets the whole thing moving at a good clip. I think it's more akin to a really hot birdshot with similar range. Not much in the way of penetration, but it's heat causes slagging and/or vaporization. If you can slag metal then you'll explode steam/flesh.

That's the best I've got. If the current hypothesis I stated is wrong then I don't know.

By the way, everything we think we know about ball lightning is a hypothesis not a theory. A theory is repeatedly tested and has a lot of evidence backing it up. A hypothesis is basically an educated guess.

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