Vehicle armour
Military vehicles are commonly armoured to withstand the impact of shrapnel, bullets or shellss, protecting the soldiers inside from enemy fire. The design and purpose of the vehicle determines the amount of armour plating carried, as the plating is often very heavy and excessive amounts of armour restrict mobility.
Composite (aka Chobham) armour was developed in the 1970s by the British and first used on the German Leopard II. It consists of layers of steel, ceramic, and plastic honeycomb, sometimes with layers of depleted uranium added. Composite is effective against both kinetic and shaped charge munitions. Against kinetic penetrators, the brittle ceramic blunts the projectile while the softer steel layers absorb its kinetic energy. Still, it is significantly less effective against shaped charge munitions, so the depleted uranium layers are added to provide extra protection against these warheads. Also, spaced armour is used to dissipate the energy of a shaped-charge warhead. It consists of simply leaving hollow spaces in the armour.
Reactive armour, initially developed by Israel, uses layers of high explosive sandwiched between steel plates. When a shaped-charge warhead hits, the explosive detonates and pushes the steel plates into the warhead, disrupting the charge's plasma flow. It is less effective against kinetic penetrators.
Sloping and curving armour both increase the effective thickness, as a projectile striking at an angle must cut through more armour than one impacting perpendicularly. They also increase the chances of deflecting projectiles. The sloping front armour of a tank is often called the glacis, and provides the best protection as it is assumed to be the easiest part of the tank to hit.
Recently, many manufacturers have added a spall liner to the inside of the armour, which is designed to absorb fragmentation (spallation) released from the impact of an enemy shell, protecting soldiers and equipment inside.
See also: Shield, Military history, Armoured fighting vehicle and Main Battle Tank
The Novel
Armor is also a military science fiction novel by John Steakley. It has many similarities with Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers (such as the military use of exoskeletons and insect-like alien enemies.)
It was first published in december 1984.