Plenty of people have been lured into science after watching an explosion or perhaps blowing up something themselves. US Army chemists routinely perform both those activities in an effort to determine how to trigger more effective explosions and to protect soldiers from unexpected blasts. The challenge is to analyze explosions up close, preferably within a few meters, while obtaining enough information to avoid the costly task of repeating the test detonation multiple times. Kevin McNesby, from the US Army Research Laboratory at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland, and his colleagues have developed a multisensor apparatus that can simultaneously probe the temperature, pressure, chemical species, and energy deposition of an explosion. During detonations of subkilogram samples of TNT and C-4, a spectrometer paired with cameras shooting at up to 40 000 frames per second mapped the temperature of the expanding fireballs and tracked the corresponding shock waves. Rapid bursts of bright...
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1 July 2016
July 01 2016
Getting up close and personal with military explosives Available to Purchase
Andrew Grant
Physics Today 69 (7), 24 (2016);
Citation
Andrew Grant; Getting up close and personal with military explosives. Physics Today 1 July 2016; 69 (7): 24. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.3223
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