IRON AND ICE
Designing better asteroid explorers
by Staff Writers
Rochester UK (SPX) Jul 15, 2020

illustration only

Recent NASA missions to asteroids have gathered important data about the early evolution of our Solar System, planet formation, and how life may have originated on Earth. These missions also provide crucial information to deflect asteroids that could hit Earth.

Missions like the OSIRIS-REx mission to Asteroid Bennu and the Hyabusa II mission to Ryugu, are often conducted by robotic explorers that send images back to Earth showing complex asteroid surfaces with cracked, perched boulders and rubble fields.

In order to better understand the behavior of asteroid material and design successful robotic explorers, researchers must first understand exactly how these explorers impact the surface of asteroids during their touchdown.

In a paper published in the journal Icarus, researchers in the University of Rochester's Department of Physics and Astronomy, including Alice Quillen, a professor of physics and astronomy, and Esteban Wright, a graduate student in Quillen's lab, conducted lab experiments to determine what happens when explorers and other objects touch down on complex, granular surfaces in low gravity environments. Their research provides important information in improving the accuracy of data collection on asteroids.

"Controlling the robotic explorer is paramount to mission success," Wright says. "We want to avoid a situation where the lander is stuck in its own landing site or potentially bounces off the surface and goes in an unintended direction. It may also be desirable for the explorer to skip across the surface to travel long distances."

The researchers used sand to represent an asteroid's surface in the lab. They used marbles to measure how objects impact the sandy surfaces at different angles, and filmed the marbles with high-speed video in order to track the marbles' trajectories and spin during impact with the sand.

"Granular materials like sand are usually quite absorbent upon impact," Quillen says. "Similar to a cannonball ricocheting off of water, pushed sand can act like a snow in front of a snowplow, lifting the projectile, causing it to skip off the surface."

The researchers constructed a mathematical model that includes the Froude number, a dimensionless ratio that depends on gravity, speed, and size. By scaling the model with the Froude number, the researchers were able to apply the knowledge gained from their experiments with the marbles to low gravity environments, such as those found on the surfaces of asteroids.

"We found that at velocities near the escape velocity - the velocity at which an object will escape gravitational attraction - many if not most rocks and boulders are likely to ricochet on asteroids," Wright says.

The results provide an explanation for why asteroids have strewn boulders and rocks that are perched on their surfaces, and they also influence the angle at which robotic missions will need to successfully touch down on the surface of an asteroid.

"Robotic missions that touch down on the surface of an asteroid will need to control the moment of touch down so that they don't bounce," Quillen says.

"The robots can accomplish this by making their angle of impact nearly vertical, by reducing the velocity of impact to a very small value, or by making the velocity of impact large enough to form a deep crater that the robotic explorer won't bounce out of."

Research paper


Related Links
University Of Rochester
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology

IRON AND ICE
Building NASA's Psyche: Design Done, Now Full Speed Ahead on Hardware
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 09, 2020
Psyche, the NASA mission to explore a metal-rock asteroid of the same name, recently passed a crucial milestone that brings it closer to its August 2022 launch date. Now the mission is moving from planning and designing to high-gear manufacturing of the spacecraft hardware that will fly to its target in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Like all NASA missions, early work on Psyche started with drawing up digital blueprints. Then came the building of engineering models, which were te ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

IRON AND ICE
Japan will reorient missile defense posture as Aegis Ashore is suspended

Raytheon Missiles and Defense awarded $2.3B production contract for missile defense radars

Lockheed Martin PAC-3 MSE Achieves Test Success

NGC and US Army team up for combined missile defense test

IRON AND ICE
Senate offers more funding for hypersonic weapons tracking

Sweden tests new ground-to-air defense missile

Trump invokes Defense Production Act for hypersonic missile production

Successful testing of rocket motor and warhead designs demonstrate progress toward flight testing

IRON AND ICE
World entering new military 'drone age': UN expert

Hundreds of drones light up Seoul sky with virus messages

Northrop Grumman system to be interim anti-drone solution

State Department approves $23M sale of Black Hawk to Jordan

IRON AND ICE
UK Govt to acquire OneWeb satellite constellation

USSF Commercial SATCOM Office announces development of new security program

FFI selects GomSpace to build military communication satellite

DARPA pit boss contractors SEAKR and SSCI team with DARPA for Blackjack early risk reduction orbital flights

IRON AND ICE
US Air Force Orders Latest Northrop Grumman LITENING Targeting Pod Upgrade

British army to cut armored vehicles acquired for war in Afghanistan

Oshkosh Defense to build 248 JLTVs in $127.7M Pentagon contract

GM Defense wins $214.3M contract to build troop carriers

IRON AND ICE
Okinawa governor demands action after COVID-19 outbreak at U.S. bases

Pentagon appoints Kratsios to top technology office

UK set to resume Saudi arms sales despite Yemen concerns

China signs UN arms trade treaty

IRON AND ICE
China hits top US lawmakers, envoy with sanctions over Xinjiang

Latvian defense minister expresses interest in U.S. troop deployment

US brands Beijing's South China Sea claims illegal

Kiev says two soldiers, army medic killed in east

IRON AND ICE
The smallest motor in the world

Crystalline 'nanobrush' clears way to advanced energy and information tech

Transporting energy through a single molecular nanowire

To make an atom-sized machine, you need a quantum mechanic