Abstract
Abstract This paper presents the results of a set of experiments aimed at discovering the main features of impact-induced vibrations on all-aluminum honeycomb sandwich panels, representative of the GOCE satellite's top floor, which is exposed to the orbital debris environment. The activity focused on the characterization of the vibrations induced in the vicinity of internal payloads by hypervelocity impacts occurring on the vehicle's external shell. More than 30 tests were realized by launching 0.8–2.3 mm aluminum projectiles in the velocity range 4–5.5 km/s on targets with tri-axial accelerometer assemblies mounted on both the front and rear face of the panel, at a nominal distance of 150 mm from the impact point. It was found that a hypervelocity impact produces in both the front and rear side of the sandwich panel a vibration environment which can be described through the shock response spectrum (SRS) of three different types of waves that can be distinguished on the basis of the acceleration direction: out-of-plane, in-plane longitudinal and in-plane shear. The influence of projectile mass and velocity on SRS appeared to vary with frequency, with the most significant difference in the range between ∼103 and ∼104 Hz. The results of whole experimental set were used to derive an interpolation law through standard techniques of nonlinear fit. The empirical equation obtained makes it possible to predict the near-field vibration environment produced by hypervelocity impacts with debris having given size and velocity, reproducing all the test data with an average uncertainty of ±6 dB.
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