29 research outputs found

    Some Exploratory Photoelastic Studies in Stress Wave Propagation

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    During the last three years the Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology (GALCIT) has been conducting a photoelastic study of stress wave propagation in solids using a high speed framing camera. This paper presents a technical description of the camera, now operating at 100,000 35 mm frames per second at one tenth microsecond exposure time for an elapsed time of approximately two milliseconds. The design capability is expected to approach a half million frames per second. This equipment has been used to record dynamic photoelastic stress fringe patterns in various specimens under impact loadings. Typical experimental records of wave propagation in cracked plates, layered media, compressed bars and beams, and cross sections of rocket heads are included in this report

    Additional Exploratory Photoelastic Studies in Stress Wave Propagation

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    In a previous report to the sponsor, the design and description of a high speed framing camera was presented along with several film strips representing the results of a series of qualitative investigations of dynamic stress wave phenomena. These studies included crack propagation, layered media, compressed bars and beams, and cross sections of rocket heads. As part of a continuing study in these and related fields, a final report is submitted covering (1) exploratory experimental studies of shock wave propagation initiated by explosive caps and by nitrogen shock wave impingement, and (2) theoretical studies of a series of dynamic stress wave problems carried out in conjunction with the overall problem

    A model for the consolidation of rafted sea ice

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    Rafting is one of the important deformation mechanisms of sea ice. This process is widespread in the north Caspian Sea, where multiple rafting produces thick sea ice features, which are a hazard to offshore operations. Here we present a one-dimensional, thermal consolidation model for rafted sea ice. We consider the consolidation between the layers of both a two-layer and a three-layer section of rafted sea ice. The rafted ice is assumed to be composed of layers of sea ice of equal thickness, separated by thin layers of ocean water. Results show that the thickness of the liquid layer reduced asymptotically with time, such that there always remained a thin saline liquid layer. We propose that when the liquid layer is equal to the surface roughness the adjacent layers can be considered consolidated. Using parameters representative of the north Caspian, the Arctic, and the Antarctic, our results show that for a choice of standard parameters it took under 15 h for two layers of rafted sea ice to consolidate. Sensitivity studies showed that the consolidation model is highly sensitive to the initial thickness of the liquid layer, the fraction of salt release during freezing, and the height of the surface asperities. We believe that further investigation of these parameters is needed before any concrete conclusions can be drawn about rate of consolidation of rafted sea ice features

    Efficient higher order composite plate theory for general lamination configurations

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    PHOTOELASTIC DESIGN DATA FOR PRESSURE STRESSES IN SLOTTED ROCKET GRAINS

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    A continuum anisotropic model of sea-ice dynamics

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    We develop the essential ingredients of a new, continuum and anisotropic model of sea-ice dynamics designed for eventual use in climate simulation. These ingredients are a constitutive law for sea-ice stress, relating stress to the material properties of sea ice and to internal variables describing the sea-ice state, and equations describing the evolution of these variables. The sea-ice cover is treated as a densely flawed two-dimensional continuum consisting of a uniform field of thick ice that is uniformly permeated with narrow linear regions of thinner ice called leads. Lead orientation, thickness and width distributions are described by second-rank tensor internal variables: the structure, thickness and width tensors, whose dynamics are governed by corresponding evolution equations accounting for processes such as new lead generation and rotation as the ice cover deforms. These evolution equations contain contractions of higher-order tensor expressions that require closures. We develop a sea-ice stress constitutive law that relates sea-ice stress to the structure tensor, thickness tensor and strain rate. For the special case of empty leads (containing no ice), linear closures are adopted and we present calculations for simple shear, convergence and divergence

    Asymmetrical buckling of spherical caps under uniform pressure

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