The Labs That Go Boom: The Shock Compression Laboratory Smashes Planets
The Shock Compression Laboratory's Blast Tank Webb ChappellCrashing celestial bodies, without the collateral damage This month, as part of our special on the future of education, PopSci presents 10 labs where students do serious research (and career training) by blowing stuff up. Lab: Shock Compression Laboratory at Harvard University Career: Mechanical engineer, geophysicist The central feature in Sarah Stewart's Harvard lab is a bright blue blast tank in which she and two undergrad assistants simulate some of the biggest booms in the cosmos: the collision of celestial objects. Attached to the blast tank is a 40-millimeter-diameter single-stage gas gun that launches quarter-pound projectiles up to 6,000 miles per hour-nearly eight times the speed of sound-at targets that mimic asteroids, planets and moons. The resultant shock-wave profiles and impact energies, recorded with a variety of sensors and strain gauges embedded in the target, help explain what happens when massive bodies collide. And...