微重力条件下风化层对低能扰动的黏附响应

S. Jarmak, J. Colwell, A. Dove, J. Brisset
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引用次数: 0

摘要

小的、没有空气的物体被一层风化层覆盖,这些风化层由μm大小的灰尘到cm大小的鹅卵石组成,它们在与地球上非常不同的条件下进化。基于飞行的微重力实验研究了厘米大小的弹丸与风化层的低速碰撞,揭示了某些撞击事件会导致质量从目标风化层转移到弹丸表面。产生这些事件的关键参数需要被表征,以理解颗粒介质的力学行为,它是由小物体的表面组成的。我们开展了旨在调查这些传质事件的飞行和地面研究活动。我们的实验活动的目标是:(1)确定影响cm大小弹丸与μm大小的风化层之间低能碰撞事件传质结果的弹丸能量阈值,(2)确定这些传质事件是否需要微重力环境才能观察到,(3)确定这些碰撞事件的反弹部分是否可以在实验室跌落塔环境中复制。我们发现(1)在弹射反弹加速度<7.8 m/s2时发生了传质事件,我们无法确定相应的冲击速度阈值;(2)传质事件需要微重力环境;(3)我们的跌落塔实验能够产生传质事件。然而,跌落塔实验并不能准确地再现长时间微重力实验的自由粒子撞击和反弹,并且系统地产生了较低的总传递质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Adhesive Response of Regolith to Low-Energy Disturbances in Microgravity
Abstract Small, airless bodies are covered by a layer of regolith composed of particles ranging from μm-size dust to cm-size pebbles that evolve under conditions very different than those on Earth. Flight-based microgravity experiments investigating low-velocity collisions of cm-size projectiles into regolith have revealed that certain impact events result in a mass transfer from the target regolith onto the surface of the projectile. The key parameters that produce these events need to be characterized to understand the mechanical behavior of granular media, which is composed of the surfaces of small bodies. We carried out flight and ground-based research campaigns designed to investigate these mass transfer events. The goals of our experimental campaigns were (1) to identify projectile energy thresholds that influence mass transfer outcomes in low-energy collision events between cm-size projectiles and μm-size regolith, (2) to determine whether these mass transfer events required a microgravity environment to be observed, and (3) to determine whether the rebound portion of these collision events could be replicated in a laboratory drop tower environment. We found that (1) mass transfer events occurred for projectile rebound accelerations <7.8 m/s2 and we were unable to identify a corresponding impact velocity threshold, (2) mass transfer events require a microgravity environment, and (3) ourdrop tower experiments were able to produce mass transfer events. However, drop tower experiments do not exactly reproduce the free-particle impacts and rebound of the long-duration microgravity experiments and yielded systematically lower amounts of the overall mass transferred.
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