Quantitative characterisation of ballistic cartridge cases from micro-CT

•Micro-CT was used to characterise ballistic cartridge cases successfully.•Repeatability and reliability are shown through method validation.•Three novel functional measurements are proposed.•Significant differences established between cartridges from two weapons.•Application of micro-CT can complem...

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Veröffentlicht in:Forensic science international 2021-09, Vol.326, p.110913-110913, Article 110913
Hauptverfasser: Alsop, K., Norman, D., Remy, G., Wilson, P., Williams, M.A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Micro-CT was used to characterise ballistic cartridge cases successfully.•Repeatability and reliability are shown through method validation.•Three novel functional measurements are proposed.•Significant differences established between cartridges from two weapons.•Application of micro-CT can complement current techniques. Evaluation of cartridge cases is essential within forensic ballistic analysis and is used in an attempt to establish a connection to the weapon used to fire it. This study consists of two experiments. The aims of Experiment 1 were to establish whether micro-CT is appropriate and repeatable for ballistic cartridge case analysis and if measurements can be extracted repeatably and reliably. Experiment 2 aimed to compare cartridge cases from two weapons to establish the magnitude of variation within and between weapons. A total of 48 cartridge cases fired by two distinct weapons were collected and micro-CT scanned to a high resolution. One randomly selected cartridge was scanned ten times under the same conditions to ensure repeatability of the scanning conditions in Experiment 1. Three novel measurements to quantitatively assess the firing pin impressions were proposed in Experiment 1 and comparatively analysed from two weapons in Experiment 2. Experiment 1 showed that micro-CT is an effective and highly repeatable and reliable method for 3-dimensional imaging and measurement of ballistic cartridge cases. Furthermore, high agreement for inter-rater reliability was found between five raters. Quantitative micro-CT analysis of the firing pin impression measurements in Experiment 2 showed a significant difference between the two studied weapons using Welch’s t-test (p 
ISSN:0379-0738
1872-6283
DOI:10.1016/j.forsciint.2021.110913