Abstract
The structures and the behaviors of shock waves propagating through a gas and solid particle mixture are studied by shock-tube experiments and by two methods of wave analysis. The shock waves concerned are incident on the mixture dispersed uniformly in downstream part of the driven section. Pressures and shock velocities are measured under the condition that the particle loading ratio and the shock Mach number are both less than two. The final equilibrium pressures behind the waves and the velocities of the fully decayed shock fronts agree well respectively with the results of the usual shock theory on the mixture and those of the model analysis on a perfect "effective" gas. The analysis by the method of characteristics is satisfactorily applied to give a good explanation of the observed process whereby a shock wave decays to a weak wave with continuous wave form. And, the authors point out some problems relating to the relaxation process and some inconsistencies of the "effective" gas theory when analyzing the unsteady wave motions.
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