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A contact dynamics code implementation for the simulation of asteroid evolution and regolith in the asteroid environment

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TLDR
The Contact Dynamics method is described, a class of DEM based on non-smooth mechanics, and its implementation in the open-source software LMGC90, and a parallelized kd-tree is implemented to monitor the performance of the code as it simulates a number of granular systems.
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This article is published in Icarus.The article was published on 2021-07-15 and is currently open access. It has received 6 citations till now.

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Citations
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Rotational Breakup as the Origin of Small Binary Asteroids

TL;DR: It is found that mass shed from the equator of a critically spinning body accretes into a satellite if the material is collisionally dissipative and the primary maintains a low equatorial elongation.
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Numerical Comparison of Contact Force Models in the Discrete Element Method

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors applied four different contact force models in the newly-proposed DEM algorithm to analyze their difference and implication, including one linear model and three nonlinear models derived from the complete Mindlin-Deresiewicz equations.
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New practical discrete non-spherical N-body method: Validation with the Brazil nut effect

TL;DR: In this article , the authors present an implementation of the contact dynamics method for discrete non-spherical particles, which can handle particles with a wide range of geometries as long as they are described in triangular surface meshes.
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The state-of-the-art of adhesion and locomotion technologies for exploring small celestial bodies

TL;DR: In this paper , a comprehensive review of adhesion and locomotion technology for exploring small celestial bodies (SCBs) is presented, with emphasis on their application prospects in SCBs exploration missions.
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Sub-surface granular dynamics in the context of oblique, low-velocity impacts into angular granular media

TL;DR: In this paper , two-dimensional discrete simulations were conducted to model low-velocity impacts into a bed of triangular grains. But the authors found that increasing velocity may actually evoke a change in the grains' dissipative response that boosts lateral perturbation, leading to the notion of the "skin zone".
References
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Granular Mechanics in Asteroid Regolith: Simulating and Scaling the Brazil Nut Effects

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the hypothesis that seismic shaking on asteroids could promote the size sorting of its constituent particles, which is evident in the images sent by the Hayabusa mission of the surface of the asteroid Itokawa.
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An extended parameter space study of the effect of cohesion in gravitational aggregates through spin-up simulations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the PKDGRAV simulation package to simulate the spin-up of simulated rubble-pile asteroids, over a broad parameter space, and found that the stronger the cohesive force, the faster a simulated asteroid can spin before failing, confirming previous analytical and numerical work.
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On inconsistency in frictional granular systems

TL;DR: The prime aim of the present study was to identify situations that hamper the consistency of the mathematical problem to solve in numerical simulation of granular systems.
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Q1. What have the authors contributed in "A contact dynamics code implementation for the simulation of asteroid evolution and regolith in the asteroid environment" ?

By providing access to the local physical mechanisms, DEM allows the exploration of microscopic based phenomena related to particles properties and interactions in various conditions and to revisit constitutive equations consequently. In this paper the authors describe the Contact Dynamics ( CD ) method, a class of DEM based on non-smooth mechanics, and its implementation in the open-source software LMGC90. In contrast to more classical approach, Hardand Soft-Sphere DEM, the CD method is based on an implicit time integration of the equations of motion and on a non-regularized formulation of mutual exclusion between particles. This numerical strategy is particularly relevant to the study of dense granular assemblies ( even of large size ) because it does not introduce numerical artefacts due to contact stiffness. So that it can be used for Small Body research, the authors implement a parallelised kd-tree and monitor the performance of the code as it simulates a number of granular systems. The authors provide examples of the simulation of the accretion of self-gravitating aggregates as well as their rotational disruption.