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Design, Fabrication and Testing of an Experimental Apparatus for Determining Particle Behavior Under Very Low Intergranular StressesBecause the constitutive laws for soils are governed mainly by interparticle friction, all aspects of their mechanical behavior depend strongly on gravitational body forces. This fact poses serious limitations on the formulation of a materially objective soil constitutive theory, based on experimentation performed on Earth. In particular, the presence of the Earth's gravity prohibits the design of controlled experiments to properly simulate a variety of critical phenomena associated with the dynamic response of soils to seismic excitation in a very low effective confining stress field. For these reasons, laboratory-controlled experiments in the Space Shuttle, under essentially zero-gravity conditions, could offer invaluable opportunities for developing a quantitative understanding of fundamental aspects of soil behavior during or after an earthquake, which, in turn, could result in significant technological advances in geotechnical earthquake engineering.
Document ID
19860000708
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Other
Authors
Sture, S.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Costes, N.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
May 1, 1985
Publication Information
Publication: NASA, Washington Microgravity Sci. and Appl. Program Tasks
Subject Category
Astronautics (General)
Accession Number
86N10175
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS8-35668
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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