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Genesis cover

On Christmas Eve 1968 three Americans became the first humans to visit another world. What they did to celebrate was unexpected and profound, and will be remembered throughout all human history. Genesis: the Story of Apollo 8, Robert Zimmerman's classic history of humanity's first journey to another world, tells that story, and it is now available as both an ebook and an audiobook, both with a foreword by Valerie Anders and a new introduction by Robert Zimmerman.

 

The print edition can be purchased at Amazon. from any other book seller, or direct from my ebook publisher, ebookit. The ebook is available everywhere for $5.99 (before discount) at amazon, or direct from my ebook publisher, ebookit. If you buy it from ebookit you don't support the big tech companies and the author gets a bigger cut much sooner.


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"Not simply about one mission, [Genesis] is also the history of America's quest for the moon... Zimmerman has done a masterful job of tying disparate events together into a solid account of one of America's greatest human triumphs."--San Antonio Express-News


Scientists: Impacts on rubble-pile asteroid are different than on planets

Landslide on Bennu from impact
Click for full image.

Using data collected by OSIRIS-REx at the asteriod Bennu, scientists have determined that the ejecta from impacts on a rubble-pile asteroid behaves in a very different manner than on planets with higher gravity.

Instead of flying away at about the same speed as the impactor and escaping into space, as expected in the weak gravity, the material is lifted up at a very slow speed, falls back down, and then rolls downhill like a landslide. The graphic to the right from the press release, reduced and enhanced to post here, illustrates what the scientists think happened when one of Bennu’s larger craters was created.

[M]ost of that material, called ejecta, returned to the surface and slid down the face of the asteroid, starting a wide avalanche that slowly rolled toward Bennu’s equator. Perry said the only way this could happen on a small object like Bennu, which is less than 500 meters (1,640 feet) in diameter and has low gravity, is if the dust had low or next to no cohesion.

“Because Bennu is so small, its escape velocity is less than a few tenths of a mile per hour, so any particle ejected faster than that would leave the surface,” he said. “These slow speeds are possible only if Bennu’s surface is weaker than we thought, even weaker than very loose, dry sand. This extremely low surface strength also means material on a slope is easily disturbed, and that’s what led to the landslide.”

In other words, the low cohesion prevents the impact’s energy from being transferred efficiently to the asteroid’s particles. They move, but only slowly, and thus end up sliding away more or less along the asteroid’s surface.

This discovery helps explain how these rubble-pile asteroids accumulate material, despite their low gravity.

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9 comments

  • John

    This is hard to fathom, if the impactor’s energy is not transferred into the asteroid, then how does it slow down? Is there an exit crater on the other side? The rubble pile has low gravity and ridiculously low escape velocity, yet most of the ejecta has ludicrously low velocity and remains? I always ASSumed the rubble pile bodies formed by relatively low velocity accretion and probably by accreting other rubble piles. But who knows. Let’s repeat deep impact on one.

    Anyway, what we all want to know, and the reason for the missions- what does it look like when a rubble pile slams into the Earth?

  • Jeff Wright

    A giant shotgun filled with phosphorus/Dragon’s Breath. Lots of airbursts. A nuke stand-off detonated with the fireball as wide as the impactor on contact may give a cupping shove. A penetration might give you a “fuzzy torus” where the energy rolls back onto itself-beware the blob!

  • Col Beausabre

    So, the material is akin to dust on this planet Question Mark

  • Andi

    Is it possible that the asteroid will “eat” the impactor and then “ring” until it dissipates the excess energy?

  • Ryan Lawson

    Try dropping a ball bearing into a bowl of jello, a bowl of sand and onto a piece of sand stone. Jello is a better analogy than sand because there is some cohesive gravity on a rubble pile but there is nothing cohesive in a bowl of sand. Maybe a bowl of wet sand is more appropriate?

    Rubble piles will probably be much easier to mine for minerals though!

  • “Rubble piles will probably be much easier to mine for minerals though!”

    Just need a space-rated vacuum truck. Managing the waste stream might be more difficult than the actual mining.

  • Edward

    John asked: “what does it look like when a rubble pile slams into the Earth?”

    Scott Manley asked the same question a couple of years ago:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OSvtznJYuI (12 minutes: “What Would Happen If Asteroid Bennu Hit Earth?”)

  • Jeff Wright

    It might be harder to mine…I have heard it described as being like those ball pits.

    Think of The Blob—made of dirt.

    Now an iron slug you can anchor to with cables—and cut into a bola with cables. At a certain distance—the inner faces of the two bola-bergs give you artificial gravity.

    You won’t be in danger of being absorbed in space quicksand. These things are ochre jellies of the solar system.

  • Ryan Lawson

    Maybe you just park your spaceship and use an electromagnet to pull out any rocks that are iron rich? The difficulty of mining a solid rock is dealing with torque in a near zero-g environment. Any form of rotating head to drill or cut becomes unwieldy. It will also consume enormous amounts of energy to do any form of cutting or drilling. Not to mention you will be generating a lot of debris that is hazardous for navigation. In this situation you gather up all the richest pieces that have already been broken down for you and you haul them off to your space station or higher gravity processing plant.

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