Publication | Closed Access
Meteor Crater: Energy of formation - Implications of centrifuge scaling
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1980
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Unknown Venue
Geotechnical EngineeringVibration EnvironmentEngineeringImpact (Mechanics)SeismologyMeteor CraterScaling RulesCivil EngineeringGeomechanicsGeologyHypervelocity ImpactTerminal BallisticsPropulsionExplosive CrateringEngineering GeologyMeteorite ImpactMeteoritics
Recent work on explosive cratering has demonstrated the utility of performing subscale experiments on a geotechnic centrifuge to develop scaling rules for very large energy events. The present investigation is concerned with an extension of this technique to impact cratering. Experiments have been performed using a projectile gun mounted directly on the centrifuge rotor to launch projectiles into a suitable soil container undergoing centripetal accelerations in excess of 500 G. The pump tube of a two-stage light-gas gun was used to attain impact velocities of approximately 2 km/sec. The results of the experiments indicate that the energy of formation of any large impact crater depends upon the impact velocity. This dependence, shown for the case of Meteor Crater, is consistent with analogous results for the specific energy dependence of explosives and is expected to persist to impact velocities in excess of 25 km/sec.