Scaling laws of plume-induced granular cratering

Author:

Gorman Matthew T1ORCID,Rubio Juan Sebastian1ORCID,Diaz-Lopez Miguel X1,Chambers Wesley A2,Korzun Ashley M3,Rabinovitch Jason4ORCID,Ni Rui1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore, MD 21218 , USA

2. NASA Marshall Space Flight Center , Huntsville, AL 35802 , USA

3. NASA Langley Research Center , Hampton, VA 23666 , USA

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stevens Institute of Technology , Hoboken, NJ 07030 , USA

Abstract

AbstractExtraterrestrial landing often requires firing a high-speed plume towards a planetary surface, and the resulting gas–granular interactions pose potential hazards to the lander. To investigate these jet-induced cratering dynamics, an experiment campaign covering a range of gas and granular properties relevant to the lunar and Martian environments was conducted in a large-scale vacuum chamber. Despite the variations in jet Mach number, mass flow rate, and composition of the granular phase investigated in this work, the observed time evolution of crater depth displays a consistent transition from an early-stage linear to a late-stage sublinear growth. To explain these scaling relations, a model that relates the kinetic energy gained by the particles per unit time to the power of the impinging jet is introduced. From this model, erosion rates and the critical depth at which the transition occurs can be extracted, and they are shown to depend on the gas impingement pressure, which was varied by changing ambient pressure, jet Mach number, mass flow rate, and nozzle height above the surface. These results highlight key mechanisms at work in the dynamics of plume-induced cratering and help to develop an understanding of optimal rocket engine firing times for future landings.

Funder

NASA Space Technology Mission Directorate’s

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference35 articles.

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