|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - A student in The University of Alabamas
Department of Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics is assisting the
U. S. Air Force in selecting the best steel alloy to use in its
next generation of air-launched weapons, through computer modeling
of the effects of high-speed penetration on projectiles.
Robert Davis, a junior majoring in aerospace engineering and mechanics,
along with Dr. Stanley Jones, Cudworth Professor of Aerospace Engineering
and Mechanics, and other members of Jones research team, are
conducting high-speed penetration tests to help develop smaller,
faster, more versatile air-launched weapons. Their research is sponsored
by the Air Force, and their findings will assist in determining
the right kind of steel casings to use in developing new, high-speed
weapons technology.
Davis, the son of Ted and Joetta Davis of Montgomery and a graduate
of Sidney Lanier High, said he wants to someday work for NASA to
develop advanced propulsion systems. I am grateful for the
opportunity to do meaningful research with exceptional faculty,
Davis said.
To study the effects of high-speed penetration on various steel
alloys, the researchers fire projectiles from a gun tube at one
end of a table towards a concrete target at the other. As the bullet-shaped
objects travel, they pass through two laser beams, spaced two inches
apart, which measure their impact velocity.
The firing apparatus produces projectile speeds of 1,200 to 4,000
feet per second, said Jones, and the results show the effects of
high-velocity penetration on the projectiles. They then determine
the deformation profiles, or eroded shapes, of each
projectile, which is dependent upon their original shape and the
materials they are made from.
These are the most controlled penetration tests of any being
done in a lab environment today, Jones explained.
Davis, who is enrolled in UAs Computer-Based
Honors Program, develops the computer programs used in the research.
A presentation on his programs for modeling the ballistic theories,
titled Analysis of High-Speed Friction, won him first-place
honors in verbal presentation at the first University of Alabama
System Honors Research Day, held in April. A fellowship from the
Computer-Based Honors Program provides funding that will assist
Davis in continuing his research.
Davis was also recently named Outstanding Undergraduate Researcher
by the aerospace engineering and mechanics department. He is a co-author
with Jones on two research papers, one of which will be presented
at a conference in Vancouver in August.
Robs ability to design such strong computer programs
allowed us to have a paper published in the Journal of Mechanical
Engineering Science, Jones said. I have an excellent
team of people working with me, he added, but Rob fills
a unique niche. And considering how much he has already accomplished,
it is definitely a role that needed filling.
|