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Previous thread.
Kinetic energy can be used in some cases when the water is blown back, but if not...
This site Kepekley23 linked helps.
10,000 psi is 689 bar
An explosion with 100m radius underwater would have a yield of:
W = 100^3*((27136*689 + 8649)^(1/2)/13568 - 93/13568)^2 = 97.286 kilotons of TNT (Town level+) Overpressure is S-tier, but this is a high end.
This paper says that
According to Cole's correlations (Ref. 2) for free-field underwater TNT explosions, the peak shock wave pressure (in psi) and integrated impulse per unit area (in psi•s) are given by:
Pm = 2.16 × 10^4(W1/3)/R)1.13 I/A = 1.46 W<su9>0.63</sup>/R0.89 where W is the charge weight in pounds and R is the range in feet. Therefore, for a given charge weight the peak shock wave pressure would be expected to vary as (1/R)1.13.
This is the Cole thing the article keeps on referencing, so I guess we can research that. Someone would have to read it though.
Kinetic energy can be used in some cases when the water is blown back, but if not...
This site Kepekley23 linked helps.
10,000 psi is 689 bar
An explosion with 100m radius underwater would have a yield of:
W = 100^3*((27136*689 + 8649)^(1/2)/13568 - 93/13568)^2 = 97.286 kilotons of TNT (Town level+) Overpressure is S-tier, but this is a high end.
This paper says that
According to Cole's correlations (Ref. 2) for free-field underwater TNT explosions, the peak shock wave pressure (in psi) and integrated impulse per unit area (in psi•s) are given by:
Pm = 2.16 × 10^4(W1/3)/R)1.13 I/A = 1.46 W<su9>0.63</sup>/R0.89 where W is the charge weight in pounds and R is the range in feet. Therefore, for a given charge weight the peak shock wave pressure would be expected to vary as (1/R)1.13.
This is the Cole thing the article keeps on referencing, so I guess we can research that. Someone would have to read it though.