1972
DOI: 10.1007/bf01029553
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Calculation of the shock waves from spherical explosive charges in air

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1972
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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The contact front does not stop when the ambient counteraction force levels off the driving piston force. There is an overexpansion effect similar to that found in numerical simulations of a spherical gas source [27] and explosive expansion into air of varying pressure [28]. This means that the pressure in the region of vaporized products goes down below pressure level of the undisturbed ambient gas.…”
Section: D Model and Numerical Resultssupporting
confidence: 54%
“…The contact front does not stop when the ambient counteraction force levels off the driving piston force. There is an overexpansion effect similar to that found in numerical simulations of a spherical gas source [27] and explosive expansion into air of varying pressure [28]. This means that the pressure in the region of vaporized products goes down below pressure level of the undisturbed ambient gas.…”
Section: D Model and Numerical Resultssupporting
confidence: 54%
“…
In the point explosion problem it is assumed that an instantaneous release of finite energy causing shock wave propagation in the ambient gas occurs at a space point.The results of the solution of the problem of such blasts are contained in [1][2][3][4].This point model is applied for the determination of shock wave parameters when the initial pressure in a sphere of finite radius exceeds the ambient air pressure by 2-3 orders of magnitude.The possibility of such a flow simulation at a certain distance from the charge is shown in papers [4,5] as applied to the blast of a charge of condensed explosive and in [6,8] as applied to the expansion of a finite volume of strongly compressed hot gas.In certain practical problems the initial pressure in a volume of finite dimensions exceeds atmospheric pressure by a factor 10-15 only. Such cases arise, for example, in the detonation of gaseous fuel---air mixtures.
…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The possibility of such a flow simulation at a certain distance from the charge is shown in papers [4,5] as applied to the blast of a charge of condensed explosive and in [6,8] as applied to the expansion of a finite volume of strongly compressed hot gas.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%