3.9 Article

Momentum Enhancement during Kinetic Impacts in the Low-intermediate-strength Regime: Benchmarking and Validation of Impact Shock Physics Codes

Journal

PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL
Volume 3, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/PSJ/ac8b89

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. European Union [870377]
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG) [398488521]
  3. CNES
  4. CNRS
  5. STFC [ST/S000615/1]
  6. DART mission
  7. NASA [80MSFC20D0004]
  8. High Performance and Cloud Computing Group at the Zentrum fur Datenverarbeitung of the University of Tubingen
  9. state of Baden-Wurttemberg through bwHPC

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This study uses three different shock physics codes to simulate momentum transfer from impactor to target and investigates the agreement between the results. By aligning the crushing behavior, the consistency between the models is improved and scaling parameters for ejecta curtain studies are derived.
In 2022 September, the DART spacecraft (NASA's contribution to the Asteroid Impact & Deflection Assessment (AIDA) collaboration) will impact the asteroid Dimorphos, the secondary in the Didymos system. The crater formation and material ejection will affect the orbital period. In 2027, Hera (ESA's contribution to AIDA) will investigate the system, observe the crater caused by DART, and characterize Dimorphos. Before Hera's arrival, the target properties will not be well-constrained. The relationships between observed orbital change and specific target properties are not unique, but Hera's observations will add additional constraints for the analysis of the impact event, which will narrow the range of feasible target properties. In this study, we use three different shock physics codes to simulate momentum transfer from impactor to target and investigate the agreement between the results from the codes for well-defined target materials. In contrast to previous studies, care is taken to use consistent crushing behavior (e.g., distension as a function of pressure) for a given porosity for all codes. First, we validate the codes against impact experiments into a regolith simulant. Second, we benchmark the codes at the DART impact scale for a range of target material parameters (10%-50% porosity, 1.4-100 kPa cohesion). Aligning the crushing behavior improves the consistency of the derived momentum enhancement between the three codes to within +/-5% for most materials used. Based on the derived mass-velocity distributions from all three codes, we derive scaling parameters that can be used for studies of the ejecta curtain.

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