6533b873fe1ef96bd12d566d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Small solar system bodies as granular systems
Derek C. RichardsonSiegfried EgglNicolas TaberletAdriano Campo BagatinHajime YanoPaul SánchezWolfgang LosertEric OpsomerStephen R. SchwartzDaniel HestrofferFahrang RadjaiPaolo TangaCharles Edouard LecomteNaomi MurdochLydie StaronMarcos SalazarDaniel J. Scheeressubject
Solar SystemSituation awareness[PHYS.ASTR.EP]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph]/Earth and Planetary Astrophysics [astro-ph.EP]Computer sciencePhysicsQC1-999Small solar system bodiesContext (language use)Granular systems01 natural sciencesCelestial mechanicsAstrobiologyTheoretical physics13. Climate actionAsteroidFísica Aplicada0103 physical sciencesFormation and evolution of the Solar System[PHYS.ASTR]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph]010306 general physics010303 astronomy & astrophysicsComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSSoil mechanicsAsteroid miningdescription
Asteroids and other Small Solar System Bodies (SSSBs) are currently of great scientific and even industrial interest. Asteroids exist as the permanent record of the formation of the Solar System and therefore hold many clues to its understanding as a whole, as well as insights into the formation of planetary bodies. Additionally, SSSBs are being investigated in the context of impact risks for the Earth, space situational awareness and their possible industrial exploitation (asteroid mining). In all these aspects, the knowledge of the geophysical characteristics of SSSB surface and internal structure are of great importance. Given their size, constitution, and the evidence that many SSSBs are not simple monoliths, these bodies should be studied and modelled as self-gravitating granular systems in general, or as granular systems in micro-gravity environments in particular contexts. As such, the study of the geophysical characteristics of SSSBs is a multi-disciplinary effort that lies at the crossroads between Granular Mechanics, Celestial Mechanics, Soil Mechanics, Aerospace Engineering and Computer Sciences. The authors acknowledge support by the International Space Science Institute (ISSI, Bern, Switzerland) and Paris observatory (France) to the international team «Asteroids & Self-Gravitating Bodies as Granular Systemsa». EO acknowledges European Space Agency program SpaceGrains and Prodex (Belspo, Brussels, Belgium) for financial support.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-07-03 | EPJ Web of Conferences |