Abstract

AbstractResults of ten-year measurements of avalanche impact upon a large-sized installation are shown. The installation is equipped with 20 pressure sensors using the principle of the intrusion of a steel cone into a duralumin plate. The impacts of 30 dry avalanches with volumes from 100 up to 50 000 m3 are analysed. A maximum pressure at “a point" of 1 100 kN/m2 and a pressure of 650 kN/m3 averaged over the area of the installation (24 m2) were recorded. It is found that 75% of the impact energy is concentrated in the lowest 2 m of the installation. Proceeding from these data, and also taking into account that the thickness of an avalanche body amounts to 10-20 m at the moment of impact, we may conclude, that there is a “dense core" and an upper ’"high aerosol" part in an avalanche body.The use of slereo-photogrammetric surveys of moving avalanches revealed the “velocity depression" effect in the Khibin avalanches: Avalanche velocity decreases abruptly (by a factor 1.5 to 2) at the end of transit channel and then grows rapidly up to a maximum at the end of the avalanche cone. The greatest variations of velocity amount to 51 m/s.The data obtained prove the inefficiency of anti-avalanche filling dams, especially because of their negative role in the generation of disasterous air waves, whose pressure varies from 20 up to 150 kN/m 2.

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