Scaling laws for doublet craters formed by low-velocity impacts of unequal-mass spheres into a granular bed
Haruto Kitagawa, Ririha Obara, and Yu Matsuda

TL;DR
This study explores how low-velocity impacts of unequal-mass spheres into granular beds create doublet craters, revealing scaling laws and asymmetries influenced by impact energy ratios and timing.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical model for doublet crater formation from unequal impacts and examines the effects of impact energy and timing on crater shape and size.
Findings
Doublet craters form even with unequal sphere masses.
Crater size scales with impact energy to the one-fourth power.
Impact timing affects crater size, with the second impact often larger.
Abstract
Understanding the formation mechanism of doublet craters is an important challenge for advancing knowledge in astronomy and granular physics. In this study, we investigated craters formed by low-velocity impacts of two steel spheres with different masses into a granular bed. Even when the masses were different, a figure-eight-shaped doublet crater and a central ridge were observed, similar to the case with equal masses. However, the resulting shape became asymmetric even without a time delay between impacts. The total length of the doublet crater increased depending on the spacing between the two spheres and the ratio of their impact energies. These results followed a theoretical model based on a scaling law, where the crater diameter is proportional to the one-fourth power of the impact energy. A model was also developed to describe the crater overlap, which increases as the spheres…
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