Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Anti-personnel weapon
An anti-personnel weapon is one primarily used to injure or kill people.
While the distinction is very old - a spear is anti-personnel, while a catapult is of more use against buildings than individuals, the large-scale development of military technology in the 19th and 20th centuries has made the concept a key consideration in design. For instance, an anti-personnel landmine will be designed not to explode when a vehicle rolls over it, and will explode into small and sharp pieces of shrapnel that tear flesh but have no effect on metal surfaces.
In general, anti-personnel weapons are designed to exploit human frailty; the general delicacy of the human frame, the need for breathable air and drinkable water, susceptibility to fire and radiation, and so forth. Anti-personnel weapons need not muster great force, as in the case of armor-piercing shells , but instead may spread smaller and slower projectiles over a larger area.
Notable anti-personnel weapons include booby traps, cluster bombs and neutron bombs.
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


