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Revision as of 10:09, 1 July 2008

Ballistic pendulum

A ballistic pendulum is a device for measuring a bullet's momentum, from which it is possible to calculate the velocity and kinetic energy. Ballistic pendulums have been largely rendered obsolete by modern chronographs, which allow direct measurement of the projectile velocity.

Although the ballistic pendulum is considered obsolete, it remained in use for a significant length of time and led to great advances in the science of ballistics. The ballistic pendulum is still found in physics classrooms today, because of its simplicity and usefulness in demonstrating properties of momentum and energy. Unlike other methods of measuring the speed of a bullet, the basic calculations for a ballistic pendulum do not require any measurement of time, but rely only on measures of mass and distance.[1]

In addition its primary uses of measuring the velocity of a projectile or the recoil of a gun, the ballistic pendulum can be used to measure any transfer of momentum. For example, a ballistic pendulum was used by physicist C. V. Boys to measure the elasticity of golf balls,[2] and by physicist Peter Guthrie Tait to measure the effect that spin had on the distance a golf ball traveled.[3]

Theory

In a perfectly inelastic collision, a bullet is fired into the stationary pendulum, which captures the bullet and absorbs its energy. The stationary pendulum now moves with a new velocity just after the collision. While not all of the energy from the bullet is transformed into kinetic energy for the pendulum (some is used as heat and deformation energy) the momentum of the system is conserved. By measuring the height of the pendulum's swing, the potential energy of the pendulum when it stops can be measured. This allows the pendulum's initial velocity to be calculated. Using the conservation of momentum, this allows the velocity of the bullet to be computed.[4]

Construction

A drawing of Robins' ballistic pendulum from an 1805 printing of New Principles of Gunnery

The device is similar to a clock's pendulum. A mass, large in relation to the mass of the bullet, is suspended at the end of an arm, with the arm and mass free to rotate around a pivot. The mass is made of or faced with a substance that will capture the bullet in the pendulum. Upon impact, the bullet is caught in the pendulum, and the momentum of the bullet is transferred to the pendulum (which is now heavier by the mass of the bullet). Conservation of momentum states that the resulting system will have a momentum equal to that of the bullet before impact; the mass of the pendulum should then be chosen to provide a reasonable final speed.

Rather than measuring speed directly, the ballistic pendulum measures the distance the pendulum travels after impact, before it falls back towards its rest state. The pendulum therefore must have a means of recording its highest point of travel. This may be done by attaching a pen or stylus, which records an arc on a sheet of paper or smoked glass, or by a measuring tape that is pulled past a marker as the pendulum moves backwards, or by a moving indicator held in its position by light friction. From the height, the potential energy of the pendulum at that point can be calculated, which can then be converted to the original velocity and therefore the momentum.

The original ballistic pendulums were actual pendulums, and the mass rotated in addition to being translated. Later designs used multiple arms, up to five, forming a parallelogram linkage to keep the majority of the mass from rotating, which simplifies the calculations.[1][2]

History

The ballistic pendulum was invented in 1742 by English mathematician Benjamin Robins, and published in his book New Principles of Gunnery, which revolutionized the science of ballistics, as it provided the first way to accurately measure the velocity of a bullet.[2][5]

Robins used the ballistic pendulum to measure projectile velocity in two ways. The first was to attach the gun to the pendulum, and measure the recoil. Since the momentum of the gun is equal to the momentum of the ejecta, and since the projectile was (in those experiments) the large majority of the mass of the ejecta, the velocity of the bullet could be approximated. The second, and more accurate method, was to directly measure the bullet momentum by firing it into the pendulum. Robins experimented with musket balls of around one ounce in mass (30 g), while other contemporaries used his methods with cannon shot of one to three pounds (0.5 to 1.4 kg).[5]

Robins' original work used a heavy iron pendulum, faced with wood, to catch the bullet. Modern reproductions, used as demonstrations in physics classes, generally use a heavy weight suspended by a very fine, lightweight arm, and ignore the mass of the pendulum's arm. Robins' heavy iron pendulum did not allow this, and Robins' mathematical approach was slightly more complex. He used the period of oscillation and mass of the pendulum (both measured with the bullet included) to calculate the rotational inertia of the pendulum, which was then used in the calculations. Robins also used a length of ribbon, loosely gripped in a clamp, to measure the travel of the pendulum. The pendulum would draw out a length of ribbon equal to the chord of pendulum's travel.[6]

The first system to supplant ballistic pendulums with direct measures of projectile speed was invented in 1808, and used a rapidly rotating shaft of known speed with two paper disks on it; the bullet was fired through the disks, parallel to the shaft, and the angular difference in the points of impact provided an elapsed time over the distance between the disks. A direct electromechanical clockwork measure appeared in 1840, with a spring-driven clock started and stopped by electromagnets, whose current was interrupted by the bullet passing through two meshes of fine wires, again providing the time to traverse the given distance.[2]

Mathematical derivations

Most physics textbooks provide a simplified method of calculation that uses the mass of the bullet and pendulum and the height of the pendulum's travel to calculate the amount of energy in the pendulum, and thus the amount of momentum in the system. This ignores the small amount of momentum involved in rotating the pendulum. Robins' calculations were significantly more involved, and used a measure of the period of oscillation to determine the rotational inertia of the system.

Simple derivation

Given the force of gravity, and the height of the pendulum, it is possible to calculate the pendulum velocity: [4]

We can then use momentum () conservation to get the speed of the bullet, , as:

Robins' formula

Robins' original book had some omitted assumptions in the formula; for example, it did not include a correction to correctly account for a bullet impact that did not match the center of mass of the pendulum. An updated formula, with this omission corrected, was, published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society in the following year. German mathematician Leonhard Euler, unaware of this correction, independently corrected this omission in his annotated German translation of the book.[5] A corrected formula, appearing in a 1786 edition of the book, was:

where:

  • is the velocity of the ball in units per second
  • is the mass of the ball
  • is the mass of the pendulum
  • is the distance from pivot to the center of gravity
  • is the distance from pivot to the point of the ball's impact
  • is the chord, as measured by the ribbon described in Robins' apparatus
  • is the radius, or distance from the pivot the attachment of the ribbon
  • is the number of oscillations made by the pendulum in one minute

Robins used feet for length and ounces for mass, though other units, such as inches or pounds, may be substituted as long as consistency is maintained.[6]

Poisson's formula

A rotational inertia based formula similar to Robins' was derived by French mathematician Siméon Denis Poisson and published in The Mécanique Physique, for measuring the bullet velocity by using the recoil of the gun:

where:

  • is the mass of the bullet
  • is the velocity of the bullet
  • is the distance from pivot to the ribbon
  • is the distance from bore axis to pivot point
  • is the combined mass of gun and pendulum
  • is the chord measured by the ribbon
  • is the radius from pivot to the center of mass of gun and pendulum (measured by oscillation, as per Robins)
  • is gravitational acceleration
  • is the distance from the center of mass of the pendulum to the pivot

can be calculated with the equation:

Where is half the period of oscillation.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b "Ballistic pendulum". Encyclopedia Brittanica.
  2. ^ a b c d "Chronograph". Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th Ed (1911).
  3. ^ Gustaf Hjalmar Eneström (1903). Bibliotheca Mathematica.
  4. ^ a b "Ballistic Pendulum". Georgia State University.
  5. ^ a b c d Edward John Routh (1905). The Elementary Part of A Treatise on the Dynamics of a System of Rigid Bodies. Macmillan.
  6. ^ a b Benjamin Robins, James Wilson, Charles Hutton (1805). New Principles of Gunnery. F. Wingrave.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)