Pettitt, B.E. Bir Materiel Command. Air Installations Div., Wright-Patterson AFB, ; Illinois Inst. of Tech., Chicago. Armour Research Foundation Publication Date: Mar. 1951 102 p. Primary Report No.: WT-59 Note: Operation GREENHOUSE Journal Announcement: NSA16 Document Type: Report Language: English Ohio } ; The loading problem is to predict the forces imposed on an isolated structure which is struck by a given blast wave moving across the structure in a direction normal to one of its faces, and the net horizontal and vertical forces as function of time are found for the period during which the structure is immersed in the wave. The development of the loading method was accomplished by a study of known theory and existing experimental data. Data obtained by shock tube studies were combined with theory to produce a set of fundamental parameter plots and a rational load-computation method. Equations of motion, used in the prediction of response, are discussed and possible alternate methods of solutions are given. (C.H.) Descriptors: CONFIGURATION; DIAGRAMS; EQUATIONS; EXPLOSIONS; REACTOR FUELING; SHOCK WAVES; TUBES Subject Codes (NSA): GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS 10/5/161 187314 (Item 161 from file: NSA-16-011358 MOTION; NUCLEAR 109) U.S. AIR FORCE STRUCTURES. ANNEX 3.3 OF OF ATOMIC WEAPON TESTS AT ENIWETOK, 1951 SCIENTIFIC DIRECTOR'S REPORT Pettitt, B.E. Air Materiel Command. Air Installations Div., Publication Date: Aug. 1951 416 p. Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio Primary Report No.: WTI-29 Note: Operation GREENHOUSE Journal Announcement: NSA16 Document Type: Report Language: English Results are reported in an investigation of the relationship of blast to structural-response damage. Methods for computing blast loading and response from basic blast data were developed and applied to the selected test structures to predict their behavior. Theoretical resuits are compared with test results to determine the validity of the analytical methods, the model relationships, and the magnitude and regimen of the several parameters. Instruments used in measuring the effects of blasts on the structures are described. Results of the tests indicate that the structures behaved as expected. It was concluded that pretest analytical methods are satisfactory, that there exists a definite scale relation of loading between small-scale models and prototypes, and that the basic parameters can be applied to other structures. Descriptors: CONFIGURATION; (C.H.) INSTRUMENTS; MEASURED VALUES; EXPLOSIONS; REACTOR FUELING; SHOCK WAVES Subject Codes (NSA): GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS 10/5/162 (Item 162 from file: 187313 NSA-16-011357 ~ NUCLEAR 109) CONTROL STUDIES PERFORMED IN THE UNITED STATES AND AT ENIWETOK. PARTS I, II, IV, AND VI. ANNEX 2.2 OF SCIENTIFIC DIRECTOR’S REPORT OF ATOMIC WHAPON TESTS AT ENIWETOK, 1951 Los Alamos Scientific Lab., N. Mex.; Naval Medical Research Inst., Bethesda, Md.; Naval Radiological Defense Lab., San Francisco; Oak Ridge National Lab., Tenn. Publication Date: 1951 171 p. Primary Report No.: WT-18 Note: Operation GREENHOUSE Journal Announcement: NSA16 Document Type: Report 9 0 0 3 9 | b Language: English

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