Event-driven dynamic trajectories reconstruction and measurement of mechanical parameters for fragments
This work addresses the critical problem of measuring fragment mechanical parameters for warhead lethality evaluation, which is essential for military damage assessment and protection design.
The paper proposes an event-driven method using multiple event cameras to reconstruct 3D trajectories and measure mechanical parameters (position, velocity, kinetic energy) of high-speed fragments in warhead detonation scenarios, overcoming challenges like strong flash and smoke. The method achieves accurate reconstruction through geometric constraints and a probability model with entropy weighting.
During warhead detonation, high-density, high-speed, and mutually occluded fragments are generated. Their mechanical parameters (position, velocity, kinetic energy) directly determine the lethality of the warhead fragment field. However, high-intensity flash and smoke in detonation scenarios severely hinder the accurate acquisition of these mechanical parameters. To address this challenge, this paper integrates experimental mechanics approaches and presents an event-driven method for reconstructing the dynamic trajectories of fragments and measuring their mechanical parameters. As a novel brain-inspired visual sensor, event cameras offer microsecond-level temporal resolution and high dynamic range lighting change perception, overcoming the difficulty of accurately measuring high-speed targets under strong flash interference. The method constructs a multi-event-camera vision system, adopting three geometric constraints: time-correlated epipolar constraint to find potential matching event point pairs, and trifocal tensor line constraint plus local homography constraint to eliminate mismatches. A comprehensive probability model is established, with entropy weight method determining the weight of each constraint's probability to quantitatively filter mismatches. 3D trajectory reconstruction is achieved via spatial line-line intersection and nonlinear optimization. Finally, the velocity and kinetic energy of the fragments are calculated based on the reconstructed trajectory. This method provides reliable technical support for the mechanical damage evaluation of warhead fragment fields and the tactical protection design.