Apollo Video Photogrammetry Estimation of Plume Impingement EffectsEach of the six Apollo mission landers touched down at unique sites on the lunar surface. Aside from the Apollo 12 landing site located 180 meters from the Surveyor III lander, plume impingement effects on ground hardware during the landings were largely not an issue. The Constellation Project's planned return to the moon requires numerous landings at the same site. Since the top few centimeters are loosely packed regolith, plume impingement from the lander ejects the granular material at high velocities. With high vacuum conditions on the moon (10 (exp -14) to 10 (epx -12) torr), motion of all particles is completely ballistic. Estimates from damage to the Surveyor III show that the ejected regolith particles to be anywhere 400 m/s to 2500 m/s. It is imperative to understand the physics of plume impingement to safely design landing sites for the Constellation Program.
Document ID
20120000657
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Immer, Christopher (ASRC Aerospace Corp. Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Lane, John (ASRC Aerospace Corp. Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Metzger, Philip (NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Clements, Sandra (ASRC Aerospace Corp. Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
IDRelationTitle20130012063See AlsoApollo Video Photogrammetry Estimation Of Plume Impingement Effects20130012063See AlsoApollo Video Photogrammetry Estimation Of Plume Impingement Effects