TY - JOUR
T1 - Reduced-gravity experiments of nonspherical rigid-body impact on hard surfaces
AU - Van wal, Stefaan
AU - Çelik, Onur
AU - Tsuda, Yuichi
AU - Yoshikawa, Kent
AU - Kawakatsu, Yasuhiro
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Ballistic landers enable orbiting asteroid missions to perform surface science at limited additional cost and risk. Due to asteroids’ weak gravity and irregular terrain, lander deployment trajectories will consist of several chaotic bounces. Although impacts on regolith-covered asteroids are numerically expensive to model, impacts on rocky asteroids can be modeled with simpler, impulsive contact models. One such model is that by Stronge, which was successfully used in large-scale Monte Carlo studies of asteroid lander deployment. This model parameterizes impacts with (fixed) material restitution and friction coefficients, but has not been validated for the low-velocity regime of an assembled, nonspherical body. This paper uses an air-bearing setup to perform 2D experiments of a rectangular floating assembly impacting a concrete block with V⩽25 cm/s. The impact velocity, assembly attitude, and block attitude are varied across 2,400 experimental runs of both normal and tangential impacts. Optical tracking is used to extract the pre- and post-impact velocities of the assembly. In a majority of cases, Stronge's model can be fit to the experiments to extract the corresponding restitution and friction coefficients. We find that the coefficients are not fixed with respect to the impact velocity and attitude, but that their variation is seemingly random. In some tangential impact cases, the model even fails to reproduce the observed behavior althogether. This suggests that there may not be a simple way to reconcile Stronge's fixed-material-coefficient model with reality, although it may retain practical use if the coefficients are randomly varied in each impact of a simulation.
AB - Ballistic landers enable orbiting asteroid missions to perform surface science at limited additional cost and risk. Due to asteroids’ weak gravity and irregular terrain, lander deployment trajectories will consist of several chaotic bounces. Although impacts on regolith-covered asteroids are numerically expensive to model, impacts on rocky asteroids can be modeled with simpler, impulsive contact models. One such model is that by Stronge, which was successfully used in large-scale Monte Carlo studies of asteroid lander deployment. This model parameterizes impacts with (fixed) material restitution and friction coefficients, but has not been validated for the low-velocity regime of an assembled, nonspherical body. This paper uses an air-bearing setup to perform 2D experiments of a rectangular floating assembly impacting a concrete block with V⩽25 cm/s. The impact velocity, assembly attitude, and block attitude are varied across 2,400 experimental runs of both normal and tangential impacts. Optical tracking is used to extract the pre- and post-impact velocities of the assembly. In a majority of cases, Stronge's model can be fit to the experiments to extract the corresponding restitution and friction coefficients. We find that the coefficients are not fixed with respect to the impact velocity and attitude, but that their variation is seemingly random. In some tangential impact cases, the model even fails to reproduce the observed behavior althogether. This suggests that there may not be a simple way to reconcile Stronge's fixed-material-coefficient model with reality, although it may retain practical use if the coefficients are randomly varied in each impact of a simulation.
KW - Asteroid
KW - Bouncing
KW - Experiment
KW - Impact
KW - Lander
KW - Validation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85095856281&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.asr.2020.10.018
DO - 10.1016/j.asr.2020.10.018
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85095856281
SN - 0273-1177
VL - 67
SP - 436
EP - 476
JO - Advances in Space Research
JF - Advances in Space Research
IS - 1
ER -