Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
779475 International Journal of Impact Engineering 2008 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

Hypervelocity collisions with space debris (SD, natural meteoroids and man-made artifacts) can significantly affect the performance of spacecraft. Here, I compare (1) the predictions of the Cour-Palais/Christiansen (C-P/C) ballistic limit equations (BLEs) spacecraft shield models with (2) the predictions of the response of those shields generated by an adaptive-mesh Eulerian hydrodynamic code, incorporating Mie-Grüneisen solid mechanics and a simple material-failure model, running on a modern PC, for hypervelocity collisions with millimeter-sized iron–nickel (Fe–Ni) spheres. The results show that the shield thicknesses predicted by the C-P/C BLEs are consistent with the adequacy of the shield response predicted by the hydrodynamic modeling. Although several hydrocodes have been used to validate the C-P/C BLEs, validating them with an (inherently computing resource-efficient) adaptive-mesh Eulerian hydrodynamic code for this impact regime appears to be novel.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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