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BACKGROUND

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Previsg:: ~nalytical and exverimental worzee2/ on isolated coniferous trees established that aerodynamic drag of tree crowns due to the

action of particle velocity is a factor causing stem and branch breakage. The impulse given the tree crowns by the peak static overpressure
is small since static pressure equalizes around individual components

of the crown with the shock velocity. Structures having natural periods
substantially longer than the time required for pressure gqualization
respond to the drag impulse of the dynamic pressure 1/2pu° where eo is
the air density following the shock and u the particle velocity. The
dynamic pressure pulse is characterized by/its peak value, the positive
phase duration, and bhe wave form factor.—
Crown characteristics and
drag measurements 240 combined with breakage deflection and breakage
force measurements,’ resulted in an analytical prediction system for
breakage of isolated trees. Breakage force-deflection measurements for
static loading of ponderosa pines chow that force and deflection at

breakage vary approximately 300 per sent between the extremes.
On UPSHOT-KNOTHOLE an artificial stand of coniferous trees 320 ft
long by 160 ft wide, composed of 145 ponderosa pine trees everaging
51 ft in height, was exposed at 4.5 psi seak static overpressure. The
stand was instrumented along and across the stan’ with ground level
static pressure gages and plitot-type dynamic pressure gages at three
elevations 250 ft from front of stand. Ground-level pressure measurements showed no significant attenuation in peak static pressure or
increase in rise times.
UPSHOT-KNOTHOLE results indicate that the prediction system for
isolated trees was conservative when applied to small coniferous stands.
However, in view of the unknown degree of attenuation for stands of
large extent and the tenuous nature of the specification of military
damage with respect to tree damage, isolated tree damage predictions
were assumed representative of damage tu tree stands. On the basis of
ana.ysis of all available data, a general breakage prediction system
was developed which represents various levels of probability of breakage

2/ Operations Research Office, Preliminary Study of the Consequences
of an Atomic Explosion Over a Forest, ORO-T-105, 1950, CONFIDENTIAL.
3/

AFSWP, SNAPPER, Project 3.3, Blast Demage to Trees--Isolated

Conifers, WI-509, January, 1953, CONFIDENTIAL--Restricted Data.

4/ AFSWP, UPSHOT-KNOTHCLE, Project 3.19.
5/ U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Div. of Fire Research,
Experimental Investication of Aerodynamic Drag in Tree Crowns Exposed
to Steady Wind--Conifere, Phase Report for Operations Research Office,
December, 1951, CONFIDENTIAL.
6/ U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Div. of Fire Research,
Crown Characteristics of Several Coniferous Tree Species, AFSWP
interim Tech. Report 416, Ferruary, 1975.
7/ U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Div. of Fire Research,

Tree Breakage Characteristics Under Static Loading, AFSWP Interim Tech.
Report 400, January, 1953, CONFIDENTIAL.

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