| High Pressure Shock Compression VII: Shock Waves and Extreme States of Matter (Shock Wave and High Pressure Phenomena) (Pt. 7) |  | Authors: Vladimir E. Fortov, L.V. Altshuler, R.F. Trunin, A.I. Funtikov Publisher: Springer Category: Book
List Price: $189.00 Buy New: $70.17 as of 2/7/2012 18:21 CST details You Save: $118.83 (63%)
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Seller: nodav349 Sales Rank: 3,525,921
Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 552 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.1 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6 x 1.3
ISBN: 0387205756 EAN: 9780387205755 ASIN: 0387205756
Publication Date: April 8, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Presenting some of the most recent results of Russian research into shock compression, as well as historical overviews of the Russian research programs into shock compression, this volume will provide Western researchers with many novel ideas and points of view. The chapters in this volume are written by leading Russian specialists various fields of high-pressure physics and form accounts of the main researches on the behavior of matter under shock-wave interaction. The experimental portions contain results of studies of shock compression of metals to high and ultra-high pressure, shock initiation of polymorphic transformations, strength, fracture and fragmentation under shock compression, and detonation of condensed explosives. There are also chapters on theoretical investigations of shock-wave compression and plasma states in regimes of high-pressure and high- temperature. The topics of the book are of interest to scientists and engineers concerned with questions of material behavior under impulsive loading and to the equation of state of matter. Application is to questions of high-speed impact, inner composition of planets, verification of model representations of material behavior under extreme 1oading conditions, syntheses of new materials, development of new technologies for material processing, etc. Russian research differs from much of the Western work in that it has traditionally been wider-ranging and more directed to extremes of response than to precise characterization of specific materials and effects. Western scientists could expect to benefit from the perspective gained from close knowledge of the Russian work.
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