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Lab Demonstration: Jones and
his team will demonstrate their ballistics research on Thursday,
June 23, at 12:30 p.m. in Hardaway Hall Room 119.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A University of Alabama engineering professor
and his student team are researching ways to improve projectiles’ ability
to penetrate sand, soil and other targets in an effort to assist
American troops.
Conducted at the U.S. Air Force’s request, research led
by Dr. Stanley E. Jones, Cudworth Professor of Aerospace Engineering
and Mechanics at UA, involves developing smaller, faster and more
versatile air-launched weapons. The findings will help determine
the right kind of steel casings for these news devices.
“The main goal of this research is to develop a way for
the armed forces to know the top speed at which they can fire a
projectile so that the projectile penetrates through to the target,” said
Jones. “The challenge has become increasingly difficult,
because our adversaries have realized the limitations associated
with conventional penetrator technologies, and they have continued
to bury their critical assets at greater and greater depths.”
Typically, target penetration depth increases with projectile
impact speed when the projectile is fired at a speed lower than
critical velocity, Jones said. If the projectile is fired at a
speed higher than the critical velocity, it typically buckles soon
after it penetrates the target and immediately ceases target penetration.
Enemies of the United States realize if targets are buried deep
under the sand, chances of destruction are slim.
Jones began the research in 2003. So far, the group has developed
stability criteria for long cylindrical projectiles, which are
those without nose geometry. His team is working on a new differential
equation, incorporating the nose geometry of a projectile and resulting
in a new critical velocity estimate.
“Using the results generated by the new differential equation,
we hope to establish how significant nose geometry is to the analysis,” explained
Jones.
If Jones’ team is successful, the Air Force will have a
new penetration model to use in their research, testing and design
of new projectiles.
In 1837, The University of Alabama became the first university
in the state to offer engineering classes and was one of the first
five in the nation to do so. Today, the College
of Engineering has about 1,800 students and more than 95 faculty.
It has been fully accredited since accreditation standards were
implemented in the 1930s.
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