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Advanced diagnostics for impact-flash spectroscopy on light-gas guns.
Author(s) -
W.G. Breiland,
William D. Reinhart,
Paul Miller,
Justin Brown,
Michael Mangan,
Eric A. Shaner,
L.C. Chhabildas,
Albert D. Grine,
Michael C. Wanke,
Christopher L. Alexander
Publication year - 2007
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/903428
Subject(s) - hypervelocity , debris , flash (photography) , materials science , space debris , black body radiation , infrared , diode , optoelectronics , silicon , environmental science , optics , radiation , physics , meteorology , thermodynamics
This study is best characterized as new technology development for implementing new sensors to investigate the optical characteristics of a rapidly expanding debris cloud resulting from hypervelocity impact regimes of 7 to 11 km/s. Our gas guns constitute a unique test bed that match operational conditions relevant to hypervelocity impact encountered in space engagements. We have demonstrated the use of (1) terahertz sensors, (2) silicon diodes for visible regimes, (3) germanium and InGaAs sensors for the near infrared regimes, and (4) the Sandia lightning detectors which are similar to the silicon diodes described in 2. The combination and complementary use of all these techniques has the strong potential of ''thermally'' characterizing the time dependent behavior of the radiating debris cloud. Complementary spectroscopic measurements provide temperature estimates of the impact generated debris by fitting its spectrum to a blackbody radiation function. This debris is time-dependent as its transport/expansion behavior is changing with time. The rapid expansion behavior of the debris cools the cloud rapidly, changing its thermal/temperature characteristics with time. A variety of sensors that span over a wide spectrum, varying from visible regime to THz frequencies, now gives us the potential to cover the impact over a broader temporal regime starting from high pressures (Mbar) high-temperatures (eV) to low pressures (mbar) low temperatures (less than room temperature) as the debris expands and cools

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