Methodology for the Design and Verification of Small Body Landers with a Crushable Impact Absorber
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DLR-Forschungsbericht_2023-13_Dissertation_Grimm_PDF-A.pdf | Dissertationsschrift | 153.31 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
Other Titles: | Methodik für die Auslegung und Prüfung von Kleinkörperlandern mit einem verformbaren Pralldämpfer | Authors: | Grimm, Christian | Supervisor: | Witte, Lars Scharringhausen, Marco |
1. Expert: | Rittweger, Andreas | Experts: | Groll, Rodion | Abstract: | The interest for the exploration of small solar system bodies has increased significantly over the past 2 decades and has since evolved from a side topic to one of the corner stones in the international science community. Major disciplines include studying the formation of the solar system, the evolution of life within, planetary defense against potential hazardous objects, as well as human exploration and resource utilization. Recent missions and studies showed that a common understanding was established to enhance high-class missions with carrying-along capabilities for detachable and specialized systems. Specifically the touchdown and landing on the surface is a very risky maneuver, but enables unprecedented high resolution in-situ investigations. However, non-propelled landing systems were designed so far to land on very small objects only with mean diameters of < 4 km (e.g. Near-Earth objects). The general interest has shifted only recently to larger bodies with mean diameters of > 10 km (e.g. Main-Belt and Trojan objects). But with increasing size and density of the target the gravitational attraction on a separated lander increases significantly, which results in much higher touchdown velocities and potential harmful impact loads. For these types of landers, however, no adequate protection system currently exists! For this reason, this thesis reviews existing methods of impact and crush mechanics, which were recombined and partially extended for the defined scope of application, to formulate a new system context and a coherent design and verification methodology for such a new technology. More specifically, this dissertation investigated the concept to enhance deployable non-propelled small body landers with a crushable and expendable exo-shell, with the main objective to sustain higher landing velocities in the range of 1 – 5 m/s by simultaneously lowering impact loads to < 100G. Furthermore, the work aimed at creating a comprehensive and applicable guide from the first concept idea to a verified innovative system design. It therefore performed the entire processing chain, including concept analysis and evaluation, system design and functional demonstration as well as empirical investigations using laboratory experiments and numerical simulations in the to be expected low gravity environment. Hereby providing fundamental details and the required tools to be applied by system and project engineers in the future to effectively design and verify small body landers with increased system performance and reliability as well as reduced overall development costs. |
Keywords: | Asteroids and Comets; Landing on Small Solar System Bodies; Impact Energy Absorption; Aluminum Honeycomb; Gravity Compensated Impact Tests; Numerical Simulation of Sandwich Structures | Issue Date: | 15-May-2023 | Type: | Dissertation | DOI: | 10.26092/elib/2722 | URN: | urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-elib74996 | Institution: | Universität Bremen | Faculty: | Fachbereich 04: Produktionstechnik, Maschinenbau & Verfahrenstechnik (FB 04) |
Appears in Collections: | Dissertationen |
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