“…With an increase in the radiation intensity and, hence, in the pressure and strain rate, the dislocation structure formed in the shock wave develops in the fol lowing sequence: uniform dislocation density distri bution-cellular dislocation structure-uniform dislo cation density distribution with stacking faults, and, finally, at pressures above 60 GPa, the formation of a strain induced structure consisting of microtwins [1][2][3][4]. In polycrystals, the character of the dislocation structure in a shock wave is determined by the grain size [5][6][7], whereas in alloys, the dislocation structure depends on the presence of precipitates in the material [7,8] and on the stacking fault energy [9]. As the pres sure increases above 1-10 GPa, the generation of geo metrically necessary dislocations at the shock wave front becomes a significant factor [4,10].…”