Do lunar rover wheels sink equally on Earth and Moon?

There has been a long discussion on how the low-gravity effects that LRUs (Lightweight Rover Units) on the Moon will experience, can affect mission planning and surface operations. In particular, the sinkage observed when regolith soil layers collapse under a normal wheel load has been an important...

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Main Authors: A.J.R. Lopez-Arreguin, B. Gundlach, E. Stoll
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-12-01
Series:Results in Physics
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211379719309490
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spelling doaj-847e91f74cf64d47bb8488d87fe8b89c2020-11-24T21:56:57ZengElsevierResults in Physics2211-37972019-12-0115Do lunar rover wheels sink equally on Earth and Moon?A.J.R. Lopez-Arreguin0B. Gundlach1E. Stoll2Institute of Space Systems, TU Braunschweig, Hermann-Blenk-Strasse 23, Braunschweig 38108, Germany; Corresponding author.Institut für Geophysik und extraterrestrische Phyisk, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Mendelssohn Str. 3, 38106 Braunschweig, GermanyInstitute of Space Systems, TU Braunschweig, Hermann-Blenk-Strasse 23, Braunschweig 38108, GermanyThere has been a long discussion on how the low-gravity effects that LRUs (Lightweight Rover Units) on the Moon will experience, can affect mission planning and surface operations. In particular, the sinkage observed when regolith soil layers collapse under a normal wheel load has been an important source of contradiction in the field of Terramechanics in the last years. In this short report we review the different authors opinions on this topic, examining in detail their definition, methods, and results.The sinkage of static wheels under lunar gravity could be less than on Earth (fixing body dimensions and soil), given the decreased normal load experienced by loose regolith. This is known as static sinkage. On the other hand, if the wheels are in permanent rotation, the effect of poor soil’s bearing capacity in lower gravities can lead to a deeper intrusion of the wheels as compared to the case on Earth (dynamic sinkage). The dynamic and static sinkage are low in lunar gravity and have more or less similar values in case the wheel surface is plane (smooth). However, if the wheel under test incorporates grousers, the lugs motion and soil’s bearing capacity would make the separate effect of dynamic sinkage to be much larger than in plane wheels. Finally, we evaluated a method that (at difference from previous models), can express more accurately the effect of static and dynamic sinkage in different gravity environments. The novel semi-empirical approach to estimate wheel penetration into soils assumes a dependency from wheel parameters, slip and terrain mechanical properties, demonstrating an improved goodness-of-fit (R2) from 91 to 99%, distinctly in a gravity interval of 16 up to 2 times the gravity on Earth. Keywords: Sinkage, Wheel, Rover, Gravity, terramechanicshttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211379719309490
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A.J.R. Lopez-Arreguin
B. Gundlach
E. Stoll
spellingShingle A.J.R. Lopez-Arreguin
B. Gundlach
E. Stoll
Do lunar rover wheels sink equally on Earth and Moon?
Results in Physics
author_facet A.J.R. Lopez-Arreguin
B. Gundlach
E. Stoll
author_sort A.J.R. Lopez-Arreguin
title Do lunar rover wheels sink equally on Earth and Moon?
title_short Do lunar rover wheels sink equally on Earth and Moon?
title_full Do lunar rover wheels sink equally on Earth and Moon?
title_fullStr Do lunar rover wheels sink equally on Earth and Moon?
title_full_unstemmed Do lunar rover wheels sink equally on Earth and Moon?
title_sort do lunar rover wheels sink equally on earth and moon?
publisher Elsevier
series Results in Physics
issn 2211-3797
publishDate 2019-12-01
description There has been a long discussion on how the low-gravity effects that LRUs (Lightweight Rover Units) on the Moon will experience, can affect mission planning and surface operations. In particular, the sinkage observed when regolith soil layers collapse under a normal wheel load has been an important source of contradiction in the field of Terramechanics in the last years. In this short report we review the different authors opinions on this topic, examining in detail their definition, methods, and results.The sinkage of static wheels under lunar gravity could be less than on Earth (fixing body dimensions and soil), given the decreased normal load experienced by loose regolith. This is known as static sinkage. On the other hand, if the wheels are in permanent rotation, the effect of poor soil’s bearing capacity in lower gravities can lead to a deeper intrusion of the wheels as compared to the case on Earth (dynamic sinkage). The dynamic and static sinkage are low in lunar gravity and have more or less similar values in case the wheel surface is plane (smooth). However, if the wheel under test incorporates grousers, the lugs motion and soil’s bearing capacity would make the separate effect of dynamic sinkage to be much larger than in plane wheels. Finally, we evaluated a method that (at difference from previous models), can express more accurately the effect of static and dynamic sinkage in different gravity environments. The novel semi-empirical approach to estimate wheel penetration into soils assumes a dependency from wheel parameters, slip and terrain mechanical properties, demonstrating an improved goodness-of-fit (R2) from 91 to 99%, distinctly in a gravity interval of 16 up to 2 times the gravity on Earth. Keywords: Sinkage, Wheel, Rover, Gravity, terramechanics
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211379719309490
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