Experimental study on compression property of regolith analogues
Tomomi Omura, Akiko M. Nakamura

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates how porosity and particle shape influence the compression strength of regolith analogs, providing insights into asteroid surface properties relevant for planetary exploration.
Contribution
It offers new experimental data on the compression behavior of fluffy granular regolith analogs and compares results with a theoretical model, highlighting the role of interparticle forces.
Findings
Yield strength increases as initial porosity decreases.
Irregular particle size distribution has minimal effect on yield strength at same porosity.
Interparticle forces are constrained between rolling and sliding friction forces.
Abstract
The compression property of regolith reflects the strength and porosity of the regolith layer on small bodies and their variations in the layer that largely influence the collisional and thermal evolution of the bodies. We conducted compression experiments and investigated the relationship between the porosity and the compression using fluffy granular samples. We focused on a low-pressure and high-porosity regime. We used tens of {\mu}m-sized irregular and spherical powders as analogs of porous regolith. The initial porosity of the samples ranged from 0.80 to 0.53. The uniaxial pressure applied to the samples lays in the range from 30 to 4x10^5 Pa. The porosity of the samples remained at their initial values below a threshold pressure and then decreased when the pressure exceeded the threshold. We defined this uniaxial pressure at the threshold as "yield strength". The yield strength…
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