détonation - translation to
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détonation - translation to

SUPERSONIC COMBUSTION OF AN EXPLOSIVE MATERIAL
Detonate; Detonations; Detonated; Detonating

faire détoner      
detonate
se détoner      
detonate
détonation         
n. detonation, report, bang, roar

Definition

Detonation
·noun An explosion or sudden report made by the instantaneous decomposition or combustion of unstable substances' as, the detonation of gun cotton.

Wikipedia

Detonation

Detonation (from Latin detonare  'to thunder down/forth') is a type of combustion involving a supersonic exothermic front accelerating through a medium that eventually drives a shock front propagating directly in front of it. Detonations propagate supersonically through shock waves with speeds in the range of 1 km/sec and differ from deflagrations which have subsonic flame speeds in the range of 1 m/sec.

Detonations occur in both conventional solid and liquid explosives, as well as in reactive gases. The velocity of detonation in solid and liquid explosives is much higher than that in gaseous ones, which allows the wave system to be observed with greater detail (higher resolution).

A very wide variety of fuels may occur as gases (e.g. hydrogen), droplet fogs, or dust suspensions. In addition to dioxygen, oxidants can include halogen compounds, ozone, hydrogen peroxide and oxides of nitrogen. Gaseous detonations are often associated with a mixture of fuel and oxidant in a composition somewhat below conventional flammability ratios. They happen most often in confined systems, but they sometimes occur in large vapor clouds. Other materials, such as acetylene, ozone, and hydrogen peroxide are detonable in the absence of an oxidant (or reductant). In these cases the energy released results from the rearrangement of the molecular constituents of the material.

Detonation was discovered in 1881 by four French scientists Marcellin Berthelot and Paul Marie Eugène Vieille and Ernest-François Mallard and Henry Louis Le Chatelier. The mathematical predictions of propagation were carried out first by David Chapman in 1899 and by Émile Jouguet in 1905, 1906 and 1917. The next advance in understanding detonation was made by John von Neumann and Werner Döring in the early 1940s and Yakov B. Zel'dovich and Aleksandr Solomonovich Kompaneets in the 1960s.

Examples of use of détonation
1. Le conducteur du bus n°26 a entendu une détonation.
2. La présidente de la Confédération était en pleine interview lorsque la détonation a eu lieu.
3. La caméra filme la détonation, et un immense panache de fumée qui monte dans le ciel.
4. On ignore l‘origine de l‘incident, des témoins ayant parlé d‘un détonation similaire à une explosion.
5. Des témoins ont dit avoir vu passer une "immense boule de feu", avant d‘entendre une intense détonation.