Investigation of impact crater processes using experimental and numerical techniques

Impact events throughout the history of the Solar System have occurred at all scales, from craters produced by the hypervelocity impact of cosmic dust observed on lunar return samples, to the giant planet-sculpting impacts that have shaped the solid bodies of the Solar System. Investigating the impa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baldwin, E.C.
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: UCL (University College London) 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/15936/
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spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:15936 2023-05-15T18:23:23+02:00 Investigation of impact crater processes using experimental and numerical techniques Baldwin, E.C. 2008-09 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/15936/ eng eng UCL (University College London) Doctoral thesis, UCL (University College London). Thesis Doctoral 2008 ftucl 2013-11-09T21:16:20Z Impact events throughout the history of the Solar System have occurred at all scales, from craters produced by the hypervelocity impact of cosmic dust observed on lunar return samples, to the giant planet-sculpting impacts that have shaped the solid bodies of the Solar System. Investigating the impact process in the laboratory allows us to understand crater formation at a small scale where strength effects dominate; however, it is difficult to scale directly to planetary sized impacts because gravity governs the cratering process at this large scale. Through computer modeling, it is possible to bridge the gap from small to large scale impact events. The influence of target porosity, saturation and an overlying water layer on crater morphology is investigated in the laboratory using a two-stage light gas gun to fire 1 mm diameter stainless steel projectiles at ~5 km s^{-1} into sandstone targets. Larger craters were formed in the higher porosity targets and saturated targets. A critical water depth of 11.6\pm 0.5 times the projectile diameter was required to prevent cratering in an unsaturated target, compared with 12.7\pm 0.6 for saturated targets. The sensitivity of this critical water depth to impact velocity, projectile diameter and density is examined through use of the AUTODYN numerical code, for both laboratory and planetary scale impact events. Projectile survivability into water and sand targets is investigated in the lab for stainless steel and shale projectiles impacting at 2-5 km s^{-1}; up to 30% of the projectile is found to survive. AUTODYN simulations shows that basalt or sandstone meteorites impacting a simulated lunar surface survive the impact at velocities <5 km s^{-1} and at a range of angles, which has positive implications for detecting terrestrial meteorites on the Moon. Groundwork has also been laid for the modelling of the deliberate collision of the SMART-1 spacecraft into the Moon. Finally, lunar and terrestrial impact events are simulated in order to quantify the depth of excavation as a function of transient crater diameter for a range of crater and basin sizes. The output is found to lie in the range 0.08-0.15, with the South Pole Aitken basin excavating material to a depth comparable to the thickness of the farside crust. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis South pole University College London: UCL Discovery Aitken ENVELOPE(-44.516,-44.516,-60.733,-60.733) South Pole
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language English
description Impact events throughout the history of the Solar System have occurred at all scales, from craters produced by the hypervelocity impact of cosmic dust observed on lunar return samples, to the giant planet-sculpting impacts that have shaped the solid bodies of the Solar System. Investigating the impact process in the laboratory allows us to understand crater formation at a small scale where strength effects dominate; however, it is difficult to scale directly to planetary sized impacts because gravity governs the cratering process at this large scale. Through computer modeling, it is possible to bridge the gap from small to large scale impact events. The influence of target porosity, saturation and an overlying water layer on crater morphology is investigated in the laboratory using a two-stage light gas gun to fire 1 mm diameter stainless steel projectiles at ~5 km s^{-1} into sandstone targets. Larger craters were formed in the higher porosity targets and saturated targets. A critical water depth of 11.6\pm 0.5 times the projectile diameter was required to prevent cratering in an unsaturated target, compared with 12.7\pm 0.6 for saturated targets. The sensitivity of this critical water depth to impact velocity, projectile diameter and density is examined through use of the AUTODYN numerical code, for both laboratory and planetary scale impact events. Projectile survivability into water and sand targets is investigated in the lab for stainless steel and shale projectiles impacting at 2-5 km s^{-1}; up to 30% of the projectile is found to survive. AUTODYN simulations shows that basalt or sandstone meteorites impacting a simulated lunar surface survive the impact at velocities <5 km s^{-1} and at a range of angles, which has positive implications for detecting terrestrial meteorites on the Moon. Groundwork has also been laid for the modelling of the deliberate collision of the SMART-1 spacecraft into the Moon. Finally, lunar and terrestrial impact events are simulated in order to quantify the depth of excavation as a function of transient crater diameter for a range of crater and basin sizes. The output is found to lie in the range 0.08-0.15, with the South Pole Aitken basin excavating material to a depth comparable to the thickness of the farside crust.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Baldwin, E.C.
spellingShingle Baldwin, E.C.
Investigation of impact crater processes using experimental and numerical techniques
author_facet Baldwin, E.C.
author_sort Baldwin, E.C.
title Investigation of impact crater processes using experimental and numerical techniques
title_short Investigation of impact crater processes using experimental and numerical techniques
title_full Investigation of impact crater processes using experimental and numerical techniques
title_fullStr Investigation of impact crater processes using experimental and numerical techniques
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of impact crater processes using experimental and numerical techniques
title_sort investigation of impact crater processes using experimental and numerical techniques
publisher UCL (University College London)
publishDate 2008
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/15936/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-44.516,-44.516,-60.733,-60.733)
geographic Aitken
South Pole
geographic_facet Aitken
South Pole
genre South pole
genre_facet South pole
op_source Doctoral thesis, UCL (University College London).
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