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COLLIDE
2 Collide-2 continues the research into the
dust collisions where its predecessor, Collide, left off in April 1998. Collide-2 will perform six independent
impacts of small quartz spheres into fine quartz sand. The impacts will be
videotaped by two small camcorders, allowing the CU team to analyse the amount,
direction and speed of dust ejected from the target trays by each impactor. The experiment will provide data on the
release of dust from the type of collision that occurs in planetary rings, and
perhaps during the early phases of planet accretion. According to Joshua Colwell, a research
associate at CU-Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, Collide
has undergone improvements and modifications for its re-flight on Endeavour. The
major features Collide contained all are present in Collide-2, although the
projectile launchers, doors, and camera containers all were redesigned after
parts of the components failed to fully operate in the original experiment. Changing the target material also was an
important priority, said Colwell. The first Collide experiment used a fine
powder called JSC-1, which is similar to lunar dust. "We found that the
finer material gets compacted during launch and does not behave in the way it
should during the experiment." This time, only one of the six experiment
boxes will contain JSC-1, while the other five will contain the grainy quartz
sand. "We've also switched from a Teflon
projectile to a quartz one to make the material interactions more
realistic," he said. Collide-2 is one of three experimental
programs underway at LASP to study the physics of low-energy collisions in
space. Planetary ring systems, protoplanetary disks, the asteroid belt and
Kuiper belt are all collisionally evolved systems. However, little is known
about the dissipation of energy, the production of ejected materials and
accretion in the low-speed collisions that occur between objects with
low-surface gravity like planetary ring particles. Although dust is ubiquitous in the rings
of the four gaseous giant planets, how the dust is "knocked off"
larger ring particles a meter or more across during their continuous collisions
with each other remains a mystery. "The rings are comprised primarily of
large particles, but we see dust throughout the rings," said Colwell.
"The dust is short-lived, so it acts as a very sensitive tracer of the
dynamics of the larger particles. But to understand that, we need to understand
each step in the life cycle of a dust particle," he said. The enormous gravity of Earth prevents
researchers from doing the type of experiment contained in Collide-2 on the
ground, said Colwell. "In order for the dust to behave the way it would in
the space environments being simulated, we need to get into a microgravity
environment." Collide-2 was designed and assembled
primarily by LASP students, under the direction of LASP faculty, instrument
assemblers and engineers. Colwell is the principal investigator and LASP
researchers Larry Esposito and Mihaly Horanyi are co-investigators. Most of the
experiment's electronics were designed for the original Collide by former
graduate student Barry Arbetter of CU-Boulder's electrical engineering
department. Tom Calihan and Dave Crotser were the primary students involved in
the re-design work for Collide-2. Other present and former CU-Boulder students
who worked on Collide-2 include Andrew Diaz, Andreas Lemos, Darren Curtis, Jeff
Gonder and Matt Kanter. In addition, Adrian Sikorski, an undergraduate at the
Colorado School of Mines in Golden designed and built several Collide-2
components Thanks to Space Daily for information. |