DocumentCode
2769908
Title
Thumper and shotgun: Low velocity kinetic penetrometers to estimate regolith and rock properties for NASA´s Asteroid Redirect Mission (ARM)
Author
Zacny, Kris ; Yaggi, Bryan ; Chu, Phil ; Johnson, Jerome ; Kulchitsky, Anton ; Hedlund, Magnus ; Davis, Kiel ; Hermalyn, Brendan ; Lee, Pascal ; Paulsen, Gale ; Abrashkin, John
Author_Institution
Honeybee Robot., Pasadena, CA, USA
fYear
2015
fDate
7-14 March 2015
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
13
Abstract
NASA´s Asteroid Redirect Mission (ARM) is a challenging mission to capture and bring back either an entire asteroid (Option A) or a large boulder from the surface of an asteroid (Option B) to a cislunar orbit. Options A and B have a range of risks; one of them relates to the unknown strength of the asteroid or boulder. This paper describes methods of estimating asteroid regolith strength and density, and the strength of boulders, using kinetic impactors: Thumpers and Shotgun. Thumpers are large, instrumented kinetic impactors specifically designed to measure regolith strength during impact deceleration. The Shotgun system, on the other hand, uses a large number of small projectiles (“balls”) fired at low velocity at the surface of the asteroid or at the boulder. If a ball impacts regolith, it will create a crater whose size is a function of regolith strength and density. If a ball impacts a coherent boulder, it will bounce back at a certain speed, whose value is proportional to rock strength. If the rebound speed cannot be measured, hollow balls packed with retroreflectors could be used instead (similar to paintballs). The shell of balls can be designed to crack open and release retroreflectors when impacting rock above the threshold strength required for successful boulder retrieval. This paper describes the concepts of Thumpers and Shotgun and demonstrates their feasibility through a series of experiments. These methods leverage many of the advantages of in-situ measurements of target properties- particularly the ability to accurately determine geotechnical measurements- at a considerably reduced cost and implementation effort, and will enable significant risk buy-down on the scope of the ARM mission.
Keywords
asteroids; planetary surfaces; NASAs Asteroid Redirect Mission; Shotgun system; asteroid regolith strength; cislunar orbit; geotechnical measurements; kinetic impactors; low velocity kinetic penetrometers; regolith; retroreflectors; Actuators; Atmospheric measurements; Biographies; Extraterrestrial measurements; NASA; Particle measurements; Pistons;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Aerospace Conference, 2015 IEEE
Conference_Location
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-5379-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/AERO.2015.7119233
Filename
7119233
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