NEW DATA ON THE VELOCITY-MASS RELATION IN CATASTROPHIC DISRUPTION

Authors
Citation
I. Giblin, NEW DATA ON THE VELOCITY-MASS RELATION IN CATASTROPHIC DISRUPTION, Planetary and space science, 46(8), 1998, pp. 921-928
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Journal title
ISSN journal
00320633
Volume
46
Issue
8
Year of publication
1998
Pages
921 - 928
Database
ISI
SICI code
0032-0633(1998)46:8<921:NDOTVR>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
The relationship between fragment velocity and mass following a disrup tive impact is of great,importance when modelling populations of small bodies such as the asteroid main belt or the more recently,observed E dgeworth-Kuiper belt where mutual collisions play an important role in their dynamic evolution. The velocity-mass relation following these m utual collisions strongly affects not only the collisional lifetime of large (gravity dominated) asteroids, but also the rate at which mass is ejected from the belt into resonances, providing a source of resupp ly for the Earth-crossing asteroid population and, in the case of the Edgeworth-Kuiper Belt, the short period comets. Although considerable work has been done on the subject of the relationship between velocity and mass of fragments from cratering and catastrophic disruption even ts, it has recently become apparent that there may not be a valid gene ral relationship between these quantities. In this paper I present a s ummary of size-velocity data obtained from single- and twin-camera fil ms of hypervelocity, highly catastrophic impacts into spherical 21 cm targets of artificial rock with strength and density similar to basalt . The 2D velocities of at least 951 fragments larger than approximatel y 10 mm have so far been measured in 8 similar experiments. Of these, 69 have been studied in 3D in the recent experiments using two cameras at 60 degrees. The data collected here suggest that in general there is only a weak correlation between mass and velocity, and that the bes t-fitting exponent varies between 0 and -1/6 with an average value of approximately - 1/13. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserv ed.