Impact experiments in low-temperature ice
Abstract
New results of low-velocity impact experiments in cubic and cylindrical (20 cm) water-ice targets initially at 257 and 81 °K are reported. Impact velocities and impact energies vary between 0.1 and 0.64 km/sec and 10 9 and 10 10 ergs, respectively. Observed crater diameters range from 7 to 15 cm and are two to three times larger than values found for equal-energy impacts in basaltic targets. Crater dimensions in ice targets increase slightly with increasing target temperatures. Crater volumes of strength-controlled ice craters are about 10 to 100 times larger than those observed for craters in crystalline rocks. Based on similarity analysis, general scaling laws for strength-controlled crater formation are derived and are applied to crater formation on the icy Galilean and Saturnian satellites. This analysis indicates that surface ages, based on impact-crater statistics on an icy crust, will appear greater than those for a silicate crust which experienced the same impact history. The greater ejecta volume for cratering in ice versus cratering in silicate targets leads to accelerated regolith production on an icy planet.
- Publication:
-
Icarus
- Pub Date:
- March 1987
- DOI:
- 10.1016/0019-1035(87)90020-0
- Bibcode:
- 1987Icar...69..506L
- Keywords:
-
- Icy Satellites;
- Impact Tests;
- Jupiter Satellites;
- Planetary Craters;
- Satellite Surfaces;
- Saturn Satellites;
- Impact Loads;
- Low Temperature;
- Temperature Dependence;
- PLANETS;
- ICE;
- IMPACTS;
- EXPERIMENTS;
- TEMPERATURE;
- LABORATORY STUDIES;
- VELOCITY;
- ENERGY;
- SIZE;
- DIAMETER;
- VOLUME;
- COMPARISONS;
- ANALYSIS;
- SCALING;
- STRENGTH;
- FORMATION;
- CRATERS;
- JUPITER;
- SATELLITES;
- SATURN;
- SURFACE;
- AGE;
- CRUST;
- EJECTA;
- SILICATE;
- REGOLITH;
- PROCEDURE;
- SHAPE;
- PHOTOGRAPHS;
- MORPHOLOGY;
- FRACTURING;
- STRUCTURE;
- DEPTH;
- CALCULATIONS;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration; Planets, Earth Science