The principal blast effects are crushing due to overpressure and the change in steady
state aerodynamic conditions due to the material velocity. The latter ia similar in nature
to the sharp-edged gusts enountered in the normal atmosphere. These changes are in-

fluenced by bending of the structure and displacement of the entire aircraft.

For Castle, analytical and experimental investigation established the critical overpressure of the B-36 as 0.8 psi, and of the B-47 as 1.0 psi. The analysis of gust loading
established the B~36 horizontal stabilizer as the critical component. Since the B-47 experiment was primarily designed to investigate thermal effects, the gust~load investigation was performed only to establish the safety of the aircraft for the thermal input to be
obtained.
Two basic problems were involved in the operation of the aircraft: the flying of the
aircraft to a point in space at a given time, and the accurate determination of the actual
TABLE 6.1

DESIRED AND ACTUAL POSITIONS AT TIME ZERO AND TIME OF
SHOCK ARRIVAL

Shot 3 data unusable because of iow yield.

All B-36 data calculated from radar soope photos

except for Shot 6, which ia Raydist data. B-47 data obtained from ship's instrumentation for
Shota 4 and 6 and from Raydist data for Shots 1 and 2.
Shot

1:

Ranges in thousands o* feet.

Hortzonta) Ranges
At Time-zero
At Shock-arrival
Desired
Actual
Desired
Actual

Shock-Arrival Position
Slant
Actual
Range
Altitude

B-36

50.0

50.8

76.7

71.5

73.8

$3.0

B-47

48.0

50.9

1210

137.5

141.9

38.0

2: 3-386
B-47

50.0
50.0

51.7
7&8

18.8
132.0

17.9
192.6

86.2
198.7

37.0
35.0

4: B-36
B-47

50.0
42 2

50.5
842

78.6
119.4

81.6
140.0

89.6
144.3

87.1
35.0

6. B-36

396

40.6

65.5

69.7

80.4

40.0

6: B-36
B-47

121.4
32.8

122.0
29.5

90.3
84.6

86.0
84.0

62.1
91.0

33.0
35.0

B-~47*

—

_

.

—

~

_

—_

* B-4° aborted Shot 5 because of fue] leak.

flight path during the thermal and blast phases of the detonation.

Positioning was in

general performed by aircraft instrumentation, and tracking by a combination of aircraft

instrumentation and a Raydist Radio Navigation System.

For safety reasons, positioning

was based on the predicted maximum-possible yield of the device.
For both experiments, danger-region diagrams were plotted in terms of horizontal

range and altitude, upon which the effects parameters discussed previously were plotted
simultaneously in order to show the boundaries of regions within which aircraft damage

would result.

These diagrams were used on each shot under a given set of conditions of

yield, aircraft velocity, and aircraft configuration, to establish a position in space which
would give the desired input without endangering the aircraft. Positioning data is sum-~
marized in Table 6.1.
Thermal instrumentation was installed to define radiant exposure, irradiance, and
the temperature rise on wing, fuselage, stablizer, and elevator. In addition, strain-

gage bridges were installed in the left wing and stablizer of the B-47 to obtain informa-

tion on the mechanical effects of the thermal input. Free-stream overpressure and
pressures on the underside of various surfaces were measured. Blast-response data
were in terms of strain-gage measurementa of the wing, fuselage, and stabilizer; linear

78

Select target paragraph3