An Experimental Study of Longitudinal Strain Pulse Propagation in Wide Rectangular Bars
- Creators
- Jones, Orval
- Ellis, Albert T.
Abstract
The plane-stress theory presented in Part I is shown to qualitatively predict the warping of plane sections observed in transient fringe patterns obtained using birefringent coatings and in dynamic photoelastic pictures obtained by other investigators. Measurements using conventional techniques are described in which wide rectangular bars were subjected to a longitudinal step-function pressure loading produced by a shock tube. Comparisons show that the gross features of the experimental records for the head of the pulse are qualitatively predicted by the theory. Both theory and experiment show that short-wavelength second mode disturbances arrive very early. Experimentally it is observed that these disturbances are accompanied by thickness mode activity which cannot be accounted for by the plane-stress theory.
Additional Information
Department of the Navy Naval Ordnance Test Station Contract N123(60530)24917A. Report No. E-108.15. Financial support from the following sources made this study possible: 1. U . S. Naval Ordnance Test Station Contract Nl23(60530)24917A. 2. National Science Foundation Grant G-2586.Attached Files
Submitted - E-108.15.pdf
Files
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 57411
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20150511-105940240
- Naval Ordnance Test Station
- N123(60530)24917A
- NSF
- G-2586
- Created
-
2015-05-11Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2019-10-03Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Hydrodynamics Laboratory