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To quickly determine structural integrity, we can perform a buckling calculation, assuming long vertical cuts are made (or a similar, equivalent cut):

Given some amount of aluminum from the cup on both ends of the column, this scenario is best approximated as a double-wall-mount buckling problem. Only first order buckling is possible, because the mission package tube constrains the cup in one direction. Thus the critical buckling load is:

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From Matweb, the Young's Modulus of aluminum is 68.9 GPa = 1.00e+7 psi. The area moment of inertia for a rectangle under buckling is

Mathinline
body\frac{bh^3}{12}
. Given a 0.1" cup thickness, bh, we can solve for the minimum width of each column, b. We apply a 2x factor of safety on the piston load (360 lbs) and generalize the number of columns as nc. Assuming evenly spaced columns, each column will endure an equal amount of load. An additional factor of safety is applied when we set L = 14", the total height of the cup:

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Mathinline
bodyb = \frac{4.3 in}{n_{c}}

So if, for example, if 8 evenly-spaced columns are used, the minimum necessary width of each column is 0.54 inches.

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