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秘密直播 APL, University of Colorado Boulder Ink Research Collaboration Partnership
Researchers from the 秘密直播 Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, and the University of Colorado Boulder (CU Boulder) are teaming up on a project to better understand and eventually predict wear and damage affecting thermal protection systems (TPSs).
The recently formalized partnership supports an independent research and development effort to track how damage evolves in a TPS, like those used on hypersonic vehicles and spacecraft, in extreme environments.
鈥淲e鈥檙e using computational modeling techniques to estimate the growth rate of a damaged TPS exposed to a hypersonic flow, intending to leverage the results to inform future test and evaluation activities to investigate TPS resiliency,鈥 said Kerri Phillips, chief scientist in APL鈥檚 Air and Missile Defense Sector (AMDS). 鈥淯ltimately, this will inform future TPS studies and tests to build an understanding of how TPS damage evolves under various flight conditions.鈥
CU Boulder and APL are members of the (UCAH), which AMDS has engaged in seeking meaningful partnerships. UCAH is a collaborative network of universities working with government, industry, national laboratories, federally funded research centers and university affiliated research centers to deliver the innovation and workforce needed to advance hypersonic flight systems supporting the national defense.
鈥淭his particular study will continue through the fiscal year, although we are looking to establish a long-term partnership with CU Boulder to investigate this type of phenomenon,鈥 Phillips said. 鈥淔orming these strategic partnerships with universities gives APL another way to contribute to advancing science and technology, applying it to some of the questions we want to answer and accelerating technology transition to the warfighter.鈥
The first project milestone is for the CU Boulder team to run its software on a two-dimensional geometry with a damaged surface. APL will compare it to existing test results for validation.
鈥淐U Boulder has a unique modeling and simulation capability that will enable us to simulate test cases that will inform future experiment designs,鈥 said Phillips. 鈥淚ain Boyd and his team developed a technique that characterizes the coupled effects of hypersonic air flows and the ablative material response of a TPS.鈥
This effort鈥檚 core APL technical team is Yo-Rhin Rhim and Samuel Slingluff, the principal investigators, and Rob Patterson, the cognizant program manager who helped implement this partnership.
鈥淥ur goal is to establish a research partnership that evolves and allows us to work closely with CU Boulder in various technical areas,鈥 Phillips said. 鈥淚 hope this is the first of many successful ventures with our academic partners as we mature this partnership and conduct more critical experiments.鈥