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1.
Phys Rev E ; 109(5-1): 054907, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38907497

ABSTRACT

Impact crater experiments in granular media traditionally involve loosely packed sand targets. However, this study investigates granular impact craters on both loosely and more tightly packed sand targets. We report experiments that consistently adhere to power-law scaling laws for diameter as a function of impacting energy, similar to those reported by other groups for their experiments utilizing both solid and granular projectiles. In contrast, we observe significant deviations in the depth versus energy power law predicted by previous models. To address this discrepancy, we introduce a physical model of uniaxial compression that explains how depth saturates in granular collisions. Furthermore, we present an energy balance alongside this model that describes the energy transfer mechanisms acting during crater formation. We found a better way to transfer vertical momentum to horizontal degrees of freedom as the impact surface compacts, resulting in shallow craters on compacted sandbox targets. Our results reveal depth-to-diameter aspect ratios from approximately 0.051 to 0.094, allowing us to interpret the shallowness of planetary craters at the light of the uniaxial compression mechanism proposed in this work.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(7): 078002, 2020 Aug 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32857574

ABSTRACT

The sedimentation of solid objects into granular matter near boundaries is an almost virgin field of research. Here we describe in detail the penetration dynamics of a cylindrical object into a quasi-2D granular medium. By tracking the trajectory of the cylinder as it penetrates the granular bed, we characterize two distinct kinds of motion: its center of mass moves horizontally away from the lateral wall, and it rotates around its symmetry axis. While the repulsion is caused by the loading of force chains between the intruder and the wall, the rotation can be associated to the frictional forces between the grains and the intruder. Finally, we show the analogies between the sedimentation of twin intruders released far from any boundaries, and that of one intruder released near a vertical wall.

3.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 90(1): 014102, 2019 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30709231

ABSTRACT

The precise and continuous tracking of millimetric-sized walkers-such as ants-is quite important in behavioral studies. However, due to technical limitations, most studies concentrate on trajectories within areas no more than 100 times bigger than the size of the walker or longer trajectories at the expense of either accuracy or continuity. Our work describes a scientific instrument designed to push the boundaries of precise and continuous motion analysis up to 1000 body lengths or more. It consists of a mobile robotic platform that uses digital image processing techniques to track the targets in real time by calculating their spatial position. During the experiments, all the images are stored and afterwards processed to estimate with higher precision the path traced by the walkers. Some preliminary results achieved using the proposed tracking system are presented.

4.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 88(8): 086107, 2017 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28863644

ABSTRACT

We introduce an instrument for a wide spectrum of experiments on gravities other than our planet's. It is based on a large Atwood machine where one of the loads is a bucket equipped with a single board computer and different sensors. The computer is able to detect the falling (or rising) and then the stabilization of the effective gravity and to trigger actuators depending on the experiment. Gravities within the range 0.4 g-1.2 g are easily achieved with acceleration noise of the order of 0.01 g. Under Martian gravity, we are able to perform experiments of approximately 1.5 s duration. The system includes features such as WiFi and a web interface with tools for the setup, monitoring, and data analysis of the experiment. We briefly show a case study in testing the performance of a model Mars rover wheel in low gravities.

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