Sable Phoenix, on 15 June 2013 - 12:35 PM, said:
The PPC ought to be a beam weapon. It's a
particle accelerator cannon. Particle accelerators function at or very near
c, the speed of light. Transit time of the "projectile" should be instantaneous and deal its damage over time, just like the lasers do. This simple change would go a very long way towards balancing 6PPC Stalkers and alpha-sniping.
One implementation of a PPC (or PPC-like device) is as a device known as an "
electrolaser".
"An
electrolaser is a type of electroshock weapon which is also a directed-energy weapon. It uses lasers to form an electrically conductive laser-induced plasma channel (LIPC). A fraction of a second later, a powerful electric current is sent down this plasma channel and delivered to the target, thus functioning overall as a large-scale, high energy, long-distance version of the Taser electroshock gun.
Alternating current is sent through a series of step-up transformers, increasing the voltage and decreasing the current. The final voltage may be between 10^8 and 10^9 volts. This current is fed into the plasma channel created by the laser beam."
In essence, the device would emit a relatively low-power laser beam (by comparison to a laser weapon) that ionizes the air it comes into contact with, creating an electrically-conductive "
plasma channel" along which a pulse or bolt of charged particles (such as
electrons,
protons or
ionized atoms/molecules) is projected.
The advantage to this is that it would (at least partially) counteract the effect known as "
blooming", wherein "particles bump into one another under the effects of thermal vibration, or bump into air molecules" and "ions of like charge repel one another", thus causing the beam/bolt to lose cohesion and severely limiting its range.
The electrolaser
being developed and tested by the US Army even resembles the BT novels' description of the PPC firing as "an arc of man-made lightning".
Like its natural counterpart, such a weapon could deliver its damage instantaneously to a very small, specific area...