TY - JOUR
T1 - Three-dimensional numerical investigation of hypersonic projectile launched by railgun on transitional ballistics
AU - Kasahara, Hirotaka
AU - Matsuo, Akiko
N1 - Funding Information:
This research used the computational resources of the High Performance Computing Infrastructure (HPCI) system provided by Cyberscience Center, Tohoku University, through the HPCI System Research Project (project ID: hp180118,190005). Part of the experimental results were obtained using the supercomputing resources.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by Hirotaka Kasahara and Akiko Matsuo. Published by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Supersonic accelerators use sabots to suppress bore balloting. However, sabot separation induces flight deviation in projectiles owing to their interactions with fluids and shock waves. A seamless calculation of the acceleration phase in the tube and the full separation process using 3-D computational fluid dynamics coupled with rigid body dynamics is presented in this study to investigate the shock-wave interactions around a railgun-launched projectile. The railgun acceleration induced a normal shock wave propagating ahead of the projectile; when the projectile reached the tube end, a substantial expansion at the muzzle generated two shock waves, namely, a spherical precursor shock wave and a Mach disk, outside the tube. Aerodynamic forces on the projectile/sabot decreased to almost zero just after the tube exit, with the ambient fluid around the tube being faster than the projectile by the substantial expansion. After exiting, the projectile penetrated the precursor shock wave at t 0.15 ms; this increased the aerodynamic forces acting on the projectile, initiated sabot separation, and generated multiple shock-wave interactions, which induce unsteady aerodynamic loads on the projectile.
AB - Supersonic accelerators use sabots to suppress bore balloting. However, sabot separation induces flight deviation in projectiles owing to their interactions with fluids and shock waves. A seamless calculation of the acceleration phase in the tube and the full separation process using 3-D computational fluid dynamics coupled with rigid body dynamics is presented in this study to investigate the shock-wave interactions around a railgun-launched projectile. The railgun acceleration induced a normal shock wave propagating ahead of the projectile; when the projectile reached the tube end, a substantial expansion at the muzzle generated two shock waves, namely, a spherical precursor shock wave and a Mach disk, outside the tube. Aerodynamic forces on the projectile/sabot decreased to almost zero just after the tube exit, with the ambient fluid around the tube being faster than the projectile by the substantial expansion. After exiting, the projectile penetrated the precursor shock wave at t 0.15 ms; this increased the aerodynamic forces acting on the projectile, initiated sabot separation, and generated multiple shock-wave interactions, which induce unsteady aerodynamic loads on the projectile.
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U2 - 10.2514/1.A34887
DO - 10.2514/1.A34887
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85114415483
SN - 0022-4650
VL - 58
SP - 919
EP - 935
JO - Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets
JF - Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets
IS - 4
ER -