Effect of Target Layering in Gravity‐Dominated Cratering in Nature, Experiments, and Numerical Simulations

Author:

Ormö J.1ORCID,Raducan S. D.2,Housen K. R.3,Wünnemann K.45,Collins G. S.6ORCID,Rossi A. P.7ORCID,Melero‐Asensio I.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centro de Astrobiología (CAB) CSIC‐INTA Torrejon de Ardoz Spain

2. Space Research and Planetary Sciences Physikalisches Institut University of Bern Bern Switzerland

3. Boeing Shock Physics Laboratory Seattle WA USA

4. Museum für Naturkunde Leibniz‐Institut für Evolutions‐ und Biodiversitätsforschung Berlin Germany

5. Freie Universität Berlin Institute of Geological Sciences Berlin Germany

6. Department of Earth Science & Engineering Imperial College London UK

7. School of Science Constructor University Bremen Germany

Abstract

AbstractImpacts into layered targets may generate “concentric craters” where a wider outer crater in the top layer surrounds a smaller, nested crater in the basement, which itself may be complex or simple. The influence of target on cratering depends on the ratio of target strength to lithostatic stress, which, in turn, is affected by gravity, target density, and crater diameter. When this ratio is large, the crater size is primarily determined by target strength, whereas gravitational forces dominate when the ratio is small. In two‐layer targets, strength may dominate in one or both layers, whereby the outer crater develops in the weaker top layer and the nested crater in the stronger substrate. However, large natural craters that should be gravity‐dominated in both cover strata and substrate may be concentric, the reasons for which are not yet fully understood. We performed qualitative impact experiments at 10–502 G and 1.8 km/s with the Boeing Corp. Hypervelocity centrifuge gun, and at 1 G and 0.4 km/s with the CAB CSIC‐INTA gas gun into layered sand targets of different compositions and grain densities but similar granulometry to analyze gravity‐dominated cratering. The results are compared with iSALE‐2D numerical simulations and natural craters on Earth and Mars. We show that target layering also affects the excavation process and concentric crater formation in gravity‐dominated impacts. The most important factors are the density and internal friction of each target layer, respectively. We propose that this is also valid for natural craters of sizes that should make their formation gravity‐dominated.

Funder

Agencia Estatal de Investigación

Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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