Title :
The railgun experiments on head-on collision of different mass bodies in 10-15 km/s range
Author :
Drobyshevski, E. ; Kurakin, R. ; Rozov, S. ; Sakharov, V. ; Studenkov, A. ; Zhukov, B.
Author_Institution :
A.F. Ioffe Physicotech. Inst., Acad. of Sci., St. Petersburg, Russia
fDate :
1/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Existing techniques allow the launch of solid imparters up to only about 10 km/s. A way of doubling the effective velocity for collision experiments is to use two accelerators to produce a head-on collision. However, light-gas guns and conventional EM launchers with pre-accelerators are not suitable for this mode of operation due to the difficulty of synchronizing the projectile motion when travelling through long bores (from a few meters to tens of meters). The compacted plasma armature railgun (RG) developed at the Ioffe Institute has a much shorter bore because it operates at a constant-along-the-barrel acceleration close to the maximum value allowed by the projectile strength or electrothermal explosion of rails. Acceleration of a typical 1 cm body reaches ~1-5 MGees, so that 7 km/s is achieved in 56 cm bore. The short acceleration length makes it possible to synchronize the motion in two counter-firing RGs. We have done experiments with two sets-ups, one using two RGs having identical square bores of 2 mm across and the other using an 8 mm square bore RG opposed to a 2 mm bore. Exploiting a rotating-mirror camera and a laser we have photographed collision processes at relative velocities of 4.9+5.1=10 km/s and 5.9+4.5=10.4 km/s, respectively. The potentials of this approach are far from being exhausted
Keywords :
aerodynamics; military equipment; plasma devices; projectiles; railguns; 1 cm; 10 to 15 km/s; 2 mm; 56 cm; 8 mm; acceleration length; constant-along-the-barrel acceleration; electrothermal explosion; head-on collision; plasma armature; projectile motion; projectile strength; railgun experiments; solid imparters; square bores; Acceleration; Boring; Electrothermal effects; Explosions; Guns; Plasma accelerators; Projectiles; Railguns; Roentgenium; Solids;
Journal_Title :
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on