Quote:
Originally Posted by Racoon
Is there a way to make better bullets and projectiles w/o depleted uranium?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pyrotex
As far as military stuff goes, this makes it essentially "free". And there is nothing that does the job as well.
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Sure there is.
The main desirable trait in a projectile material is density.
Uranium’s very dense (about 19.1 g/cm^3). Poor old traditional bullet stuff
lead is practically fluff in comparison at about 11.3 g/cm^3.
Tungsten’s a little denser (about 19.4 g/cm^3),
Platinum (about 21.45 g/cm^3) even more, though the former being valuable and uncommon, and the latter being about the most rare and valuable precious metal there is, put a practical damper them.
Gold is in the same range (about 19.3 g/cm^3). All have an additional disadvantage that your enemy can gather them up and get so rich you can no longer afford to have a war with him.
Thus, I fear Pyrotex is correct for all practical considerations.
Mercury, though liquid at room temperature, is dense (about 13.5 g/cm^3), but, nearly everyone knows, not a good thing to go throwing about.
A quick browse of a table of elements suggests that
Seaborgium (at a barely-measured-in-time 35 g/cm^3) could be the ultimate bullet material, but given that only traces of it have been made at tremendous cost, and the most stable isotopes (271Sg, half life 2.4 min) is, along with its chain of decay products, so radioactive it makes plutonium look like something you’d like be comfortable using as sunblock, is far beyond the realm of reasonable possibility. (I sincerely hope – one should never underestimate the ingenuity of weapon designers

)
Even though it seems innocuous in comparison, hardly any common projectile-material is very environmentally friendly, until you get down in the much lower density neighborhood of bio-friendly stuff like iron (7.8 g/cm^3), which is roughly, density-wise, to uranium as aluminum is to iron. Solid lead is a pretty nasty toxin and, unlike, I think, uranium, is hightly bio-available, making it prone to getting into food chains though various creatures great and small.
The only practical way to limit ecological damage from weapon waste is, I think, to clean up after them. Given that the world’s militaries can’t even reliably clean up much more dangerous junk like unexploded land mines, dealing with stuff that can’t actually blow you up is, I expect (and would hope), a lower priority.
Best plan: don’t go tossing projectiles around that you don’t intend to promptly pick up, which pretty much rules out all weapons of war. War is, in nearly every way I can see, about the most unhealthy thing there is.
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