Challenges and opportunities for measuring metal temperature during shock-ramp compression
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Temperature is an elusive measurement, but great strides have been made for metals under shock-ramp compression. Combining experience from plate impact experiments with newer technologies, near-infrared pyrometry is viable for temperatures from 900 K to 3000 K at several nanosecond rise times. Moderate shock compression (10--50 GPa) followed by continuously increasing pressure allows a variety of metal temperatures to be measured. This presentation will describe how shock-ramp temperatures are measured at the Sandia Z machine, summarizing challenges that have been overcome and ongoing work needed to extend this capability.
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Presenters
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Dan Dolan
Sandia National Laboratories
Authors
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Dan Dolan
Sandia National Laboratories
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Thomas M Hartsfield
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Richard Hacking
Mission Support & Test Services