1,103 research outputs found
Collisional Formation and Modeling of Asteroid Families
In the last decade, thanks to the development of sophisticated numerical
codes, major breakthroughs have been achieved in our understanding of the
formation of asteroid families by catastrophic disruption of large parent
bodies. In this review, we describe numerical simulations of asteroid
collisions that reproduced the main properties of families, accounting for both
the fragmentation of an asteroid at the time of impact and the subsequent
gravitational interactions of the generated fragments. The simulations
demonstrate that the catastrophic disruption of bodies larger than a few
hundred meters in diameter leads to the formation of large aggregates due to
gravitational reaccumulation of smaller fragments, which helps explain the
presence of large members within asteroid families. Thus, for the first time,
numerical simulations successfully reproduced the sizes and ejection velocities
of members of representative families. Moreover, the simulations provide
constraints on the family dynamical histories and on the possible internal
structure of family members and their parent bodies.Comment: Chapter to appear in the (University of Arizona Press) Space Science
Series Book: Asteroids I
Effects of interparticle friction on the response of 3D cyclically compressed granular material
We numerically study the effect of inter-particle friction coefficient on the
response to cyclical pure shear of spherical particles in three dimensions. We
focus on the rotations and translations of grains and look at the spatial
distribution of these displacements as well as their probability distribution
functions. We find that with increasing friction, the shear band becomes
thinner and more pronounced. At low friction, the amplitude of particle
rotations is homogeneously distributed in the system and is therefore mostly
independent from both the affine and non-affine particle translations. In
contrast, at high friction, the rotations are strongly localized in the shear
zone. This work shows the importance of studying the effects of inter-particle
friction on the response of granular materials to cyclic forcing, both for a
better understanding of how rotations correlate to translations in sheared
granular systems, and due to the relevance of cyclic forcing for most
real-world applications in planetary science and industry
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