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Encyclopedia > Explosive velocity

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  Results from FactBites:
 
Explosive material - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (5534 words)
Explosives are classified as low or high explosives according to their rates of decomposition.
The term "detonation" is used to describe an explosive phenomenon whereby the decomposition is propagated by the explosive shockwave penetrating the explosive material.
Explosive force is released at 90 degree angles from the surface of an explosive.
Explosive velocity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (159 words)
Explosive velocity is the velocity at which the shockwave front travels from a detonated explosive.
Velocities often reach into several kilometres per second, as is the case for nitroglycerin, where the explosive velocity has been cited as 7700 m.s
If the explosive is confined before detonation (such as TNT in an artillery shell), the force produced is focused on a much smaller area (the barrel of the gun), and the pressure is massively intensified.
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