- What Exactly is a Shock Wave? - Physics Stack Exchange
The Wikipedia defintion of a shock wave pretty much sums up all I've found online about what a shock wave is: A shock wave is a type of propagating disturbance Like an ordinary wave, it carries
- North East OK - Mossberg shockwave 590 12 ga Price lowered
Mossberg Shockwave 590 12ga, 14 3 8 barrel length chambered for 2 3 4' and 3" Top rail and side saddle attached I bought it used, thought I would use or want, but decided it isn't for me I put 10 rounds through it Functions as it should, I just won't use it $400 pm for questions
- Why does entropy jump across a shockwave? - Physics Stack Exchange
A comment that should have been an answer: Probably, the significant entropy change occurs right at the shock, which, in the author's approximation occurs at a plane, while the actual shock, involving viscous dissipation, occurs over a narrow finite region This sentence is helpful for an outsider in framing the other, longer answer which has so far appeared
- Is a bombs shockwave strong enough to kill? [closed]
Is a bomb's shockwave strong enough to kill? [closed] Ask Question Asked 10 years, 3 months ago Modified 10 years, 3 months ago
- How do you explain the formation of shockwave on the wing surface . . .
Explanations of shockwave for the common folks (youtube videos, googling) all tend to focus on successive sound waves generated by the air craft traveling outward in circles (sphere) That to me,
- North East OK - Mossberg shockwave 590 12 ga | Oklahoma Shooters
Mossberg Shockwave 590 12ga, 14 3 8 barrel length chambered for 2 3 4' and 3" top rail and side saddle attached I bought it used, thought I would use or want, but decided it isn't for me I put 10 rounds through it Functions as it should, I just won't use it $425 pm for
- How do shock waves reflect? - Physics Stack Exchange
A shockwave is just a pressure wave When it encounters the wall, part of the wave is reflected and part of it is refracted into the wall The energy of the wave has to go somewhere, and if the atoms in the solid medium is not as willing to vibrate, the energy is redirected Further, if the wave encounters a denser medium, the wave will also experience a phase-shift Another way to see it is
- Why exactly do atomic bombs explode? - Physics Stack Exchange
The shockwave heats air as it passes, but it is not as hot as the fireball It is at least 50,000K, maybe 100,000K--so it's at least as radiant as a lightning bolt--but it is not transient, and it could subtend a much larger solid angle--hence the phenomenal thermal damage
|