Title: Firing Weapons from Enclosures: Predicting the Waveform
1Firing Weapons from Enclosures Predicting the
Waveform
Human Research and Engineering Directorate
Dr. Joel T. Kalb jkalb_at_arl.army.mil (410)
278-5977
2Need for Calculation Procedure
Human Research and Engineering Directorate
- In combat it is certain that weapons will be
fired from within rooms, bunkers and alleys. - Firer will be exposed to intense acoustic impulse
that lasts much longer than firing in open
position. - Even with hearing protection, human exposure is a
limiting factor in weapon design and use. - There are currently no methods to predict
pressure waveforms for different room sizes and
weapon positions. - Prediction will help select hearing protection
which maximizes speech intelligibility and
auditory situation awareness.
3Assumptions of Calculation Procedure
Human Research and Engineering Directorate
- Air-blast model begins with static explosive
charge located behind weapon (Goodman 1960) - Apply cardiod directivity pattern from moving
charge model (Armendt 1956, Fansler 1995 ) - Adjust to fit outdoor arrival time, peak pressure
and A-duration on four radials at 60 feet (Engle
1994) - Room reflection model traces rays from multiple
images of weapon (Allen 1979) - Lossless plane-wave reflection from walls, door
and window
4Geometry for outdoor recordings, source location
and directivity pattern
5Blue gunner head Red 180Green 150
Magenta 120 Cyan 90
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7Gunner waveform comparison for weapon fired
outdoors (red) and from room (blue)
8Coordinate system and location of walls, window,
door, weapon and gunner (receiver)
9Ground level grid of rooms containing real and
image weapons, room indices and rays from three
sources to receiver
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