scholarly journals Deadly injuries through recoilless anti-tank weapons while military shooting practice—two case studies from Germany and Switzerland

2020 ◽  
Vol 134 (6) ◽  
pp. 2199-2204
Author(s):  
Katharina Jellinghaus ◽  
Charlotte Scherer ◽  
Edouard Stauffer ◽  
Petra Urban ◽  
Michael Bohnert ◽  
...  

Abstract In this casuistry, two accidents from Germany and Switzerland are presented that happened during the shot of recoilless anti-tank weapons. In both cases, the injuries led to the death of two soldiers: A 22-year-old soldier in Germany was struck by the counter mass of a so-called Davis gun which had been fired by a comrade during a firing exercise; he died from his severe injuries, especially in the abdominal part of the body. As a peculiarity of the wound morphology, it was found to be a thick-layered, metallic, gray material in the wound cavity, which corresponded to the material of the counter mass that was ejected opposite to the shooting direction. The other case took place in Switzerland, where a 24-year-old soldier was seriously injured during an exercise with portable anti-tank rockets. At the time the shot was fired, he stood behind the launcher and was hit by the propulsion jet of the rocket motor. He died as well from his severe injuries, which were located at the chest done by the gas jet and by the very high pressure. In both cases, two different causes of death were present: massive blunt violence in the first case versus a jet of hot gases of very high speed and temperature in the second case.

Trudy MAI ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Snazin ◽  
Artem Sevchenko ◽  
Evgeny Panfilov ◽  
Igor Prilytskiy

1832 ◽  
Vol 122 ◽  
pp. 195-228 ◽  

The perturbations of the planets is the subject of reiterated researches by all the great geometers who have raised up Physical Astronomy to its present elevation. They have been successful in determining the variations which the elements of the orbit of a disturbed planet undergo; and in expressing these variations analytically, in the manner best adapted for computation. But the inquirer who turns his attention to this branch of study will find that it is made to depend upon a theory in mechanics, which is one of considerable analytical intricacy, known by the name of the Variation of the Arbitrary Constants. Considerations similar to those employed in this theory were found necessary in Physical Astronomy from its origin; but the genius of Lagrange imagined and completed the analytical processes of general application. In a dynamical problem which is capable of an exact solution, such as a planet revolving by the central attraction of the sun, the formulas constructed by Lagrange enable us to ascertain the alterations that will be induced on the original motions of the body, if we suppose it urged by new and very small forces, such as the irregular attractions of the other bodies of the planetary system. General views of this nature are very valuable, and contribute greatly to the advancement of science. But their application is sometimes attended with inconvenience. In particular cases, the general structure of the formulas may require a long train of calculation, in order to extricate the values of the quantities sought. It may be necessary for attaining this end to pass through many differential equations, and to submit to much subordinate calculation. The remedy for this inconvenience seems to lie in separating the general principles from the analytical processes by which they are carried into effect. In some important problems, a great advantage, both in brevity and clearness, will be obtained by adapting the investigation to the particular circumstance of the case, and attending solely to the principles of the method in deducing the solution. It may therefore become a question whether it be not possible to simplify physical astronomy by calling in the aid only of the usual principles of dynamics, and by setting aside every formula or equation not absolutely necessary for arriving at the final results. The utility of such an attempt, if successful, can hardly be doubted. By rendering more accessible a subject of great interest and importance, the study of English mathematicians may be recalled to a theory which, although it originated in England, has not received the attention it deserves, and which it has met with in foreign countries. The paper which I have the honour to submit to the Royal Society, contains a complete determination of the variable elements of the elliptic orbit of a disturbed planet, deduced from three differential equations that follow readily from the mechanical conditions of the problem. In applying these equations, the procedure is the same whether a planet is urged by the sole action of the central force of the sun, or is besides disturbed by the attraction of other bodies revolving about that luminary; the only difference being that, in the first case, the elements of the orbit are all constant, whereas in the other case they are all variable. The success of the method here followed is derived from a new differential equation between the time and the area described by the planet in its momentary plane, which greatly shortens the investigation by making it unnecessary to consider the projection of the orbit. But the solution in this paper, although no reference is made to the analytical formulas of the theory of the variation of the arbitrary constants, is no less an application of that method, and an example of its utility and of the necessity of employing it in very complicated problems.


High-speed photographic techniques have been used to investigate the sympathetic detonation of solid explosives by shocks propagated across air gaps and solid barriers. It has been observed that initiation takes place within the body of the receptor stick, rather than at the surface, if the shock pressure is appreciably less than the detonation pressure. The depth in the receptor at which initiation occurs depends systematically upon the pressure of the incident shock ; the lower the pressure the deeper the point of initiation. Detonation always occurs at the shock front, but, under the conditions of the experiments completed thus far, does not propagate backward into the preshocked explosive. The propagation velocity of the detonation wave in the receptor is, at least initially, greater than that observed under ordinary conditions. Studies of initiation by impact have shown many points of similarity. Initiation takes place within the body of the target explosive block, at a point ahead of the striking projectile, except at very high velocities of impact. The depth in the explosive and the distance ahead of the projectile at which initiation occurs depend mainly upon the velocity of the projectile and upon the shape of its front. In agreement with previous work, it has been shown that the kinetic energy of the impacting projectile is not a basic parameter in determining the probability of initiation or the conditions under which it occurs.


1964 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-329 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. F. Purser ◽  
G. B. Young

The effects of maternal age and birth weight on survival of twin lambs has been studied in a Blackface and a Welsh Mountain flock. The time of death was also investigated for both singles and twins.Twin mortality was higher than mortality of singles, mainly due to the lower average birth weight of twins. Twin mortality declined with increasing birth weight although it showed a tendency to increase at the top of the scale. Weight for weight, mortality was similar for singles and twins. Twin mortality declined with increasing age of ewe in a very similar pattern to single mortality.Lamb mortality was heavy at birth and during the first 14 days of life with only 30% of the mortality occurring after this age. Approximately 12% of the dead lambs were stillborn. Among singles a similar proportion died as a result of difficult births, but this cause of mortality was rare in twins.Stillbirth mortality rates were very high for very small birth weights and declined with increasing weight of lamb. Difficult births, on the other hand, increased with increasing birth weight. The association of birth weight with mortality was particularly important in the first 14 days of life but thereafter its significance was less.Although mortality in lambs of younger ewes was heavier than that of older ewes, similar causes of death operated. Younger ewes, however, having lower birth weights tended to have more stillbirths but few losses due to difficult lambings.


2011 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 671-677 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew McGee

In a paper that has recently attracted discussion, David Shaw has attempted to criticize the distinction the law has drawn between withdrawing and withholding life-sustaining measures on the one hand, and euthanasia on the other, by claiming that the body of a terminally ill patient should be seen as akin to life support. Shaw compares two cases that we might, at least at first, regard as distinct, and argues that they are not. In the first case, Adam, who is dying of lung cancer, is connected to a ventilator and requests to be disconnected. In the second case, Brian, also dying of cancer, is not connected to anything, and so he requests his doctor to provide him with a lethal injection. In the first case, Shaw contends, Adam is being kept alive by a ventilator. In the second case, Brian is being kept alive by his body.


2004 ◽  
Vol 132 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 38-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Slobodan Nikolic ◽  
Zoran Mihailovic ◽  
Jelena Micic

Suicides by electrocution are extremly rare in our country. In these cases, specific or characteristic external lesions caused through contact with conductors at the sites of entry and exit of the current, as well as general autopsy findings, and excluding the other possible causes of death, are important to elucidate them. Dilema if death was sucidal, homicidal or accidental in manner, could be solved through good police investigation, and properly explained circumstantial events. Herein, we reported two cases of suicidal deaths, caused by electrocution. In the first case, it was a male, age of 32, who wraped the electrical cord around his rists, and kiled himself by plugging it in. In second case, it was a female, age of 46, abused by her husband, who commited suicide by putting the switched hear-dryer into the water in bathtube.


These observations will be allowed to have a considerable degree of importance, when we find that they ultimately lead to a safe and effectual method of removing a portion of the tongue, when that organ has assumed a diseased action or morbid excrescences of a cancerous nature, to which this, as well as many other glandular structures, are known to be liable. In a physiological view they will likewise be found to merit particular attention, as they tend to prove that the internal structure of the tongue is not of that delicate and sensible nature which, from its being the organ of taste, we should be led to imagine. The first case here mentioned, and from which various inferences are derived which lead to a new mode of treating the disorders of the tongue, was that of a gentleman whose tongue had been accidentally bit near the tip, and had hence become completely insensible, insomuch that every article of nourishment he took was equally insipid, and that the tip felt like a bit of wood in his mouth. No degree of inflammation, however, or spasmodic tendency having accompanied these symptoms, Mr. Home inferred that the nerves supplying this, and perhaps the other organs of sense, are not so liable to irritation as those which belong to other parts of the body.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (02) ◽  
pp. 60-70
Author(s):  
Karuppusamy P

The fundamental operations of the communication are the multiplication and division. The multiplier usually consumes a larger area and power and poses a very high latency. As all the above mentioned characteristics of the multiplier depends on the techniques utilized for the multiplication. It becomes necessary to put into effect a proper multiplier that reduces both the latency and the power consumption. So the paper analysis the performance of the various multipliers and scopes to develop a low power high speed multiplier based on the Baugh Wooley algorithm. The Performance analysis of the Baugh Wooley multiplier and the other existing multipliers is done and was found that the performance of the Baugh Wooley in terms of the latency and the power consumption was convincing compared to the other existing methods.


1962 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 361-368
Author(s):  
N. F. Kuprevich

In recent years we witnessed in science and technology a wide application of the methods of television in intensifying the brightness of faint images. The increase in brightness of the image makes it, in turn, possible to shorten considerably the time of exposure. In astronomical observations using photographic techniques this proves to be very important, since it enables us to lessen the adverse effects of the atmospheric disturbance and thereby to bring the resolving power of the telescope closer to its theoretical value. Besides, in the television system the image is converted into a series of electrical signals, one following the other with very high speed. This makes it possible to perform any kind of a manipulation with the video signals—for example, to add them, to subtract them, etc., and to examine the results in the form of an image on the screen of the kinescope. On it, it is possible to view at the same time several images of simultaneous phenomena occurring at different points in space. This characteristic of the television system distinguishes it from other methods and possibilities for electron amplification of the brightness of images used in practice.


2014 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamad Bagher Minaei ◽  
Elham Ghadami Yazdi ◽  
Mohamad Ebrahim Zadeh Ardakani ◽  
Fataneh Hashem Dabaghian ◽  
Ali Mohammad Ranjbar ◽  
...  

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