4.6 Article

Numerical simulations of the contact between the lander MASCOT and a regolith-covered surface

Journal

ADVANCES IN SPACE RESEARCH
Volume 62, Issue 8, Pages 2099-2124

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.asr.2017.05.029

Keywords

Asteroids; Hayabusa2; MASCOT lander; Regolith

Funding

  1. Lagrange Laboratory of the Observatoire de la Cote d'Azur
  2. French space agency CNES [BCU26]
  3. University of Nice-Sophia

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In 2018, the mother spacecraft of the Hayabusa2 mission will release the lander MASCOT above the surface of the asteroid (162173) Ryugu. The lander will impact the regolith layer of the asteroid at low speed. While the descent trajectory of MASCOT is well determined before its release, its behavior once it touches the surface of Ryugu remains a great unknown. Predictions of the contact properties as a function of the assumed regolith properties and landing geometry (e.g., energy after bounce if not zero, collision duration. . .) are extremely valuable in terms of landing site selection and interpretation of the data acquired during and after landing. In this study, we use the N-body code pkdgrav to perform more than 480 numerical simulations of the first contact between the lander MASCOT and a granular medium representing the regolith layer. We explore the influence of several input parameters on the outcomes of the contact. These parameters are related to the lander, the grains of the regolith and the layer thickness. We identify a certain number of trends for the lander's behavior, depending on the configuration of the contact, and perform a statistical analysis of the most critical output parameters. We also investigate the ejected material and show that, in addition to the data acquired from the lander itself, a post-impact visualization of the contact site(s) may help to infer non-observable properties of the regolith layer. Our results provide some insights on several input parameters that are implemented in the study of MASCOT's whole trajectory. This work is a starting point of a much broader study, aiming to explore as widely as possible the parameter space associated with a low-speed impact of a lander onto a regolith layer. (C) 2017 COSPAR. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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