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Dive into the research topics where S. I. Rozov is active.

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Featured researches published by S. I. Rozov.


IEEE Transactions on Magnetics | 2001

Physics of solid armature launch transition into arc mode

E.M. Drobyshevski; S. I. Rozov; B. G. Zhukov; R. O. Kurakin; M.V. Beloborodyy; V.G. Latypov

The railgun launch of a solid armature is conventionally divided into two stages, namely, the initial stage, where a metallic contact is retained between the armature and the rails, and the second, starting at a velocity /spl sim/0.3-2 km/s, where the contact occurs through the arc plasma. While a variety of reasons for the transition were considered, no universally accepted physical picture supported by experiment has thus far been formulated. We showed experimentally that under usual launch parameters, 3D MHD instabilities form in the contact gap because of the absence of shear resistance, which result in the formation, collapse, and, eventually, explosion of pinch waists (see E.M. Drobyshevski et al. Tech. Phys. Letts., vol.25 no.3, p.245-7, 1999). The destruction of the pinch waists gives rise not only to termination of current flow from the armature to the rail through the metal and transformation of the metallic contact in the armature/rail interface into an arc gap, but to ejection of the liquid metal and dusty plasma from the gap forward and back into the railgun bore as well. Even in the absence of MHD instabilities, armature material can be shed due to very inhomogeneous distribution of fields of thermal, electric, and dynamic parameters in the armature body. Appearance of easily-ionized matter in the bore results in the formation of shunting arcs there, which naturally reduce the armature launching efficiency. The new physics revealed by the authors in the railgun solid-armature launch transition to the arc regime provides a basis for a search for ways of increasing the launch efficiency.


Journal of Physics D | 1999

The importance of three dimensions in the study of solid armature transition in railguns

E.M. Drobyshevski; R. O. Kurakin; S. I. Rozov; B. G. Zhukov; M V Beloborodyy; V. G. Latypov

It is shown experimentally that the main processes first causing breakdown of the sliding solid contact (SSC) carrying large currents are not two-dimensional processes of the velocity skin-effect type, but pinch instabilities developing in the contact interface. Electromagnetic and electrothermal explosive ejection of ionized material of low-mass pinch waists ignite parasite-shunting arcs behind and ahead of the armature under acceleration. Thus one has to speak of transition into arcing mode not of the SSC alone, but of the launch process as a whole. It has been noted that during the transition into the arcing mode the solid armature begins to behave as a hybrid armature of pulling type. At this operation mode, two stable arcs appear, due to pinch cords moving forward along the contact surfaces, which are fixed to both contact surfaces of the armature near their leading edges. Consequently, the armature main body is accelerated under the action of internal tensile forces originating in its leading part where the I × B forces are applied.


Technical Physics | 2010

Parameters of an Erosion Carbon Plasma in the Channel of a Railgun

S. V. Bobashev; B. G. Zhukov; Roman Kurakin; S. A. Ponyaev; B. I. Reznikov; S. I. Rozov

The working current dependences of the thermodynamic and electrophysical parameters of a free plasma piston moving with a near-maximal velocity in the channel of an electromagnetic rail launcher with graphite electrodes are obtained. The composition and weight of the plasma depend on the degree of electrode erosion due to discharge current passage (i = 40–80 kA). It is shown that the mean temperature of the plasma piston only slightly depends on the plasma mean pressure and plasma piston weight and increases with current by a near-power law. The measured values of the maximal velocity of the plasma piston front are compared with the calculated value of the sound velocity inside the piston. With the working current and cross-sectional area of the channel fixed, the initial gas density in the channel is found to influence the ratio of the piston maximal velocity to the sound velocity in the plasma. If the initial gas density is low (lower than some critical value), the maximal velocity of the plasma piston front exceeds the sound velocity in the plasma.


Technical Physics | 2007

Influence of the gas density on the motion of a free plasma piston in the railgun channel

B. G. Zhukov; B. I. Reznikov; R. O. Kurakin; S. I. Rozov

The influence of the gas density on the acceleration of a plasma armature inside the railgun channel filled with various gases (xenon, air, or helium) under atmospheric pressure is investigated experimentally and theoretically. It is shown that, after the discharge current has reached a steady value, the velocity of the glowing plasma front ceases to grow and remains constant as long as so does the current. The length over which the velocity saturates is equal to a few centimeters, i.e., is much shorter than the railgun channel length. The maximum velocity of the plasma piston meets a predicted limit, which is determined by the drag of the medium and a decrease in the acceleration of the plasma armature when a fraction of the material evaporated from the rails is involved into motion. The plasma composition depends on the electrode material. The velocities measured when the channel is filled with helium (V = 17.5 km/s) or air (V = 9.8 km/s) noticeably exceed the sound speed inside the plasma piston (5–7 km/s).


Technical Physics Letters | 2006

Direct observation of isolated ultrananodimensional diamond clusters using atomic force microscopy

A. Ya. Vul; A. T. Dideĭkin; Z. G. Tsareva; M. N. Korytov; P. N. Brunkov; B. G. Zhukov; S. I. Rozov

Isolated ultrananodimensional diamond (UND) particles obtained by means of detonation synthesis have been studied using atomic force microscopy (AFM). The UND particles were deposited onto the surface of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite from a suspension based on organic compounds. The deposited UND particles were deaggregated using a two-stage treatment with ultrasound and high-dynamic-pressure pulses. The isolated UND particles were stabilized in suspension by a benzene additive. AFM images of individual UND particles have been obtained, and the phenomenon of their alignment along atomic steps on the substrate surface has been observed.


Technical Physics Letters | 2010

Generation of high-velocity plasma flows in railgun channels filled with gases of various density

S. V. Bobashev; B. G. Zhukov; Roman Kurakin; S. A. Ponyaev; B. I. Reznikov; S. I. Rozov

We have studied the motion of a plasma piston (PP) in the channel of an electromagnetic railgun accelerator with a cross-sectional area of 36 and 86 mm2. The accelerator was placed in a chamber that could be evacuated and then filled with helium or argon at a pressure within 25–250 Torr. It is established that the stationary PP velocity in the channel depends on the gas type and pressure. The results are satisfactorily described by the proposed model. Experimental data can be used for evaluating the effective running inductance of the accelerator and the coefficient of erosion of the electrode material.


Technical Physics Letters | 2013

A compact railgun accelerator for millimeter-sized dielectric solid armatures

B. G. Zhukov; R. O. Kurakin; V. A. Sakharov; S. V. Bobashev; S. A. Ponyaev; B. I. Reznikov; S. I. Rozov

Millimeter-sized dielectric solid armatures have been accelerated in a compact railgun system. It is shown that application of an external pulsed magnetic field can solve the problem of catastrophic erosion of electrodes at the initial stage and accelerate small armatures up to a velocity of about 6 km/s.


Technical Physics Letters | 1999

Role of the pinch effect in a high-velocity metallic contact with a high current

E. M. Drobyshevskii; B. G. Zhukov; R. O. Kurakin; S. I. Rozov; M. V. Beloborodyi; V. G. Latypov

Experimental evidence is presented in support of the hypothesis that the main factor determining the flow of physical processes on the interface of a sliding solid-state contact carrying a ∼0.1–1 MA/cm2 current is the sausage-type MHD pinch instability. It leads to the appearance and explosive destruction of tightening (quasi) liquid constrictions connecting the contact surfaces, so that under magnetic-suspension conditions the sliding of the latter relative to one another is virtually contact-free on the greater portion of their area.


Technical Physics | 2014

Effective erosion coefficient and plasma velocity limitation in the channel of an electromagnetic rail accelerator

B. I. Reznikov; S. V. Bobashev; B. G. Zhukov; R. O. Kurakin; S. A. Ponyaev; S. I. Rozov

The concept of an effective erosion coefficient, which takes into account the capture and entrainment in motion (by accelerated plasma) of only part of the erosion mass lost by rail accelerator electrodes, is introduced to describe the plasma acceleration dynamics in the channel of an electromagnetic rail accelerator. This parameter is determined from a comparison of the experimental and calculated plasma velocities at the stage of velocity saturation. The plasma velocity is calculated using a model that takes into account the pressure force of a shock-compressed gas and the deceleration force that appears during the capture of the erosion mass by a plasma piston. The ratio of the captured mass to the mass lost by the electrodes is found to depend on the current; for copper, this ratio is 1/4–2/3. The effective erosion coefficient is 0.6–0.7 mg/C at a current of ∼40 kA.


Technical Physics Letters | 2013

Synchronous acceleration of two millimeter-sized bodies up to hypersonic velocities in a multichannel railgun

B. G. Zhukov; R. O. Kurakin; V. A. Sakharov; S. V. Bobashev; S. A. Ponyaev; B. I. Reznikov; S. I. Rozov

A two-channel electromagnetic railgun accelerator of bodies of original design is described. Using this device, synchronous group flight in the atmosphere has been realized for two plastic cubes with a 2-mm edge length and ∼0.01-g mass each at a velocity exceeding 4 km/s. The flight and related gas-flow patterns have been monitored by high-speed photography using a double-frame schlieren system.

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B. G. Zhukov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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R. O. Kurakin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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B. I. Reznikov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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S. A. Ponyaev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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S. V. Bobashev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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V. A. Sakharov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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E.M. Drobyshevski

Russian Academy of Sciences

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V. G. Latypov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A.M. Studenkov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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M V Beloborodyy

Russian Academy of Sciences

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