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Space station impact experimentsFour processes serve to illustrate potential areas of study and their implications for general problems in planetary science. First, accretional processes reflect the success of collisional aggregation over collisional destruction during the early history of the solar system. Second, both catastrophic and less severe effects of impacts on planetary bodies survivng from the time of the early solar system may be expressed by asteroid/planetary spin rates, spin orientations, asteroid size distributions, and perhaps the origin of the Moon. Third, the surfaces of planetary bodies directly record the effects of impacts in the form of craters; these records have wide-ranging implications. Fourth, regoliths evolution of asteroidal surfaces is a consequence of cumulative impacts, but the absence of a significant gravity term may profoundly affect the retention of shocked fractions and agglutinate build-up, thereby biasing the correct interpretations of spectral reflectance data. An impact facility on the Space Station would provide the controlled conditions necessary to explore such processes either through direct simulation of conditions or indirect simulation of certain parameters.
Document ID
19860017665
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Schultz, P.
(Brown Univ. Providence, R. I., United States)
Ahrens, T.
(California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, United States)
Alexander, W. M.
(Baylor Univ. Waco, Tex., United States)
Cintala, M.
(NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Gault, D.
(Murphys Center of Planetology Calif., United States)
Greeley, R.
(Arizona State Univ. Tempe, United States)
Hawke, B. R.
(Hawaii Univ. Honolulu, United States)
Housen, K.
(Boeing Aerospace Co. Seattle, Wash., United States)
Schmidt, R.
(NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
May 1, 1986
Publication Information
Publication: Space Station Planetology Experiments (SSPEX)
Subject Category
Astrophysics
Accession Number
86N27137
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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