Physics
Scientific paper
Nov 2004
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2004phrvl..93s8003l&link_type=abstract
Physical Review Letters, vol. 93, Issue 19, id. 198003
Physics
66
Granular Systems, Impacts, Cratering
Scientific paper
Very fine sand is prepared in a well-defined and fully decompactified state by letting gas bubble through it. After turning off the gas stream, a steel ball is dropped on the sand. On impact of the ball, sand is blown away in all directions (“splash”) and an impact crater forms. When this cavity collapses, a granular jet emerges and is driven straight into the air. A second jet goes downwards into the air bubble entrained during the process, thus pushing surface material deep into the ground. The air bubble rises slowly towards the surface, causing a granular eruption. In addition to the experiments and the discrete particle simulations we present a simple continuum theory to account for the void collapse leading to the formation of the upward and downward jets.
Bergmann Raymond
der Weele Ko van
Kuipers Hans
Lohse Detlef
Mikkelsen René
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