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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of measured and predicted conditions behind a reflected shock

TLDR
In this paper, measured thermodynamic conditions behind reflected shocks in a gas-driven diaphragm shock tube are compared to Rankine-Hugoniot predictions, and the consistency of the data indicates that a homogeneous local thermodynamic equilibrium model is an adequate description of the gas.
Abstract
Measured thermodynamic conditions behind reflected shocks in a gas‐driven diaphragm shock tube are compared to Rankine‐Hugoniot predictions. Pressures of the shock‐heated neon, which contained small concentrations of spectroscopic additives, were measured by quartz transducers. Temperatures (9000‐13 000°K) were simultaneously measured spectroscopically by line reversal and absolute emission techniques, while electron densities were measured by the broadening of the Balmer line Hβ. The temperature has been measured to an accuracy of ±1.5%, while electron densities have been determined with an accuracy of ±10%. Pressure measurements attained accuracies of ±5%. The consistency of the data indicates that a homogeneous local thermodynamic equilibrium model is an adequate description of the shock‐heated gas. The state measurements, compared with the real gas Rankine‐Hugoniot predictions, show significant departures. Predicted temperatures are typically 3% ± 10% higher than those measured. The predicted electron...

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Journal ArticleDOI

A new technique for the study of test time and rarefaction wave effects in hypersonic shock tubes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a technique which employs a smear camera to measure the test time of a combustion-driven and arc-driven shock tube and provided a method for determining that regime of shock tube operation where the rarefaction wave reflected from the driver section plays a dominant role.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental transition probabilities and Stark-broadening parameters of neutral and singly ionized tin

TL;DR: In this article, the strengths and Stark effect widths of the Sn I and Sn II lines prominent between 3200 and 7900 A were measured with a spectroscopic shock tube.
Journal ArticleDOI

Atomic Transition Probabilities of the Halogens

TL;DR: Halogens atomic transition probabilities spectroscopic measurements in visible and near IR spectra, using gas driven shock tube, were performed in this paper using a gas-driven shock tube.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relative transition probabilities for krypton.

TL;DR: In this paper, the first experimental line strength data for the visible Kr II lines and for several of the more prominent Kr I lines are given, where the spectroscopic light source used is the thermal plasma behind the reflected shock wave in a gas-driven shock tube.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental Transition Probabilities for Neon i

TL;DR: Transition probabilities of visible and near-IR neon lines, using gas-driven shock tube spectroscopy, were obtained in this paper, where the transition probabilities were shown as a function of the number of neon lines.
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