Ax_xiom
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Alright, thanks!Frabjous said:Give me a day or two.
This discussion centers on the mathematical and physical principles necessary to understand explosion physics, particularly the derivation of blast wave equations as presented in Jorge S. Diaz's seminar. Key areas of focus include multivariable calculus, fluid dynamics, and the Rankine-Hugoniot boundary conditions. Participants express a desire to comprehend how air speed and overpressure relate to explosion size and distance from the epicenter, emphasizing the importance of accurate mathematical modeling and references such as Diaz's papers and the Wikipedia article on blast waves.
PREREQUISITESResearchers, physicists, and engineers interested in explosion dynamics, blast wave modeling, and the mathematical foundations of fluid dynamics related to explosive events.
Alright, thanks!Frabjous said:Give me a day or two.
Frabjous said:Kinney and Graham "Explosive Shocks in Air" 1985
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Do you mean compare overpressure to the mach number of the shockwave?Frabjous said:What does the mach number comparison look like?
Isn't that what I did when I got the result I'm currently testing? I took the result for ##\frac{dz}{dt}## and changed it to an expression of the mach number, then used that expression to calculate the pressure (and overpressure)Frabjous said:Try to follow the analysis in the paper.
It starts with z vs t
Then comes mach number.
Then comes pressure.
You want to see where the disagreement starts. Then you try to figure out the discrepancy there.Ax_xiom said:Isn't that what I did when I got the result I'm currently testing? I took the result for ##\frac{dz}{dt}## and changed it to an expression of the mach number, then used that expression to calculate the pressure (and overpressure)
So plot overpressure against mach number?Frabjous said:You want to see where the disagreement starts. Then you try to figure out the discrepancy there.
I mean, the definition of a blast wave requires it to be supersonic. It will eventually weaken into an acoustic wave. So that was pretty silly by said poster.renormalize said:Thanks for citing the Diaz & Rigby paper. We had a poster some time back who vehemently insisted that a blast-wave shock-front could propagate at the speed-of-sound ##c## and cited data from the 2020 Beirut chemical explosion to back his claim. But the analysis in this paper clearly demonstrates that the Beirut shock front traveled supersonically and only approached ##c## ("acoustic wave") as ##t\rightarrow\infty##:
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