True, the general appearance of these micro turbine rotors isn't that different from a turbocharger rotor, only much bigger than the variety that you usually find on car or truck engines. The turbine wheel has a diameter of 165mm. These small turboshaft engines provide round about 200hp from a package no heavier than maybe 45kg (100lbs).
See here if you like.
Conventional xenon flash lamps aren't suitable for this application but there are
short arc lamps available that permit quite fast repetition rates so I could probably fire every third revolution of the rotor. LEDs are problematic due to the very short flash duration required so the picture doesn't get blurred. I'm not sure how much I can overload a typical white LED if I operate it pulsed (t < 1µs) and I'm also not certain of the decay time of the fluorescent used in those white LEDs. Short arc xenon flash lamps achieve microsecond pulses without difficulty, depending on the configuration of the pulse shaping network.
A free running trigger oscillator is somewhat a problem: The generator is stable, that's not the issue, but the engine may vary in rpm, depending on the load. Though it's governed, there's usually soome droop in the regulation loop, and the ability to observe transients would be a "nice to have" as well. That's why I'm looking for a way to sync/couple the trigger generator to the engine.
BTW, these engines are usually equipped with either a tacho generator or a specific (switched magnetic reluctance) RPM pickup. Their output signal isn't necessarily synchronous with the rotor frequency, but obviously in a fixed ratio to it.