4.7 Article

The Brazil nut effect and its application to asteroids

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 443, Issue 4, Pages 3368-3380

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stu1388

Keywords

methods: numerical; comets: general; minor planets, asteroids: general

Funding

  1. Astronomy Center for Theory and Computation Prize Fellowship at the University of Maryland
  2. Dundee Fellowship at the University of Dundee
  3. French space agency CNES
  4. US National Aeronautics and Space Administration issued through the Office of Space Science [NNX08AM39G, NNX10AQ01G, NNX12AG29G]
  5. National Science Foundation [AST1009579]

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Out of the handful of asteroids that have been imaged, some have distributions of blocks that are not easily explained. In this paper, we investigate the possibility that seismic shaking leads to the size sorting of particles in asteroids. In particular, we focus on the so-called Brazil nut effect (BNE) that separates large particles from small ones under vibrations. We study the BNE over a wide range of parameters by using the N-body code PKDGRAV, and find that the effect is largely insensitive to the coefficients of restitution, but sensitive to friction constants and oscillation speeds. Agreeing with the previous results, we find that convection drives the BNE, where the intruder rises to the top of the particle bed. For the wide-cylinder case, we also observe a 'whale' effect, where the intruder follows the convective current and does not stay at the surface. We show that the non-dimensional critical conditions for the BNE agree well with previous studies. We also show that the BNE is scalable for low-gravity environments and that the rise speed of an intruder is proportional to the square root of the gravitational acceleration. Finally, we apply the critical conditions to observed asteroids, and find that the critical oscillation speeds are comparable to the seismic oscillation speeds that are expected from non-destructive impacts.

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