P31A-2054
MarsSedEx III: linking Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) and reduced gravity experiments

Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Nikolaus J Kuhn, Brigitte Kuhn and Andres Gartmann, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland
Abstract:
Nikolaus J. Kuhn (1), Brigitte Kuhn (1), and Andres Gartmann (2)

(1) University of Basel, Physical Geography, Environmental Sciences, Basel, Switzerland (nikolaus.kuhn@unibas.ch), (2) Meteorology, Climatology, Remote Sensing, Environmental Sciences, University of Basel, Switzerland

Experiments conducted during the MarsSedEx I and II reduced gravity experiments showed that using empirical models for sediment transport on Mars developed for Earth violates fluid dynamics. The error is caused by the interaction between runing water and sediment particles, which affect each other in a positive feedback loop. As a consequence, the actual flow conditions around a particle cannot be represented by drag coefficients derived on Earth. This study exmines the implications of such gravity effects on sediment movement on Mars, with special emphasis on the limits of sandstones and conglomerates formed on Earth as analogues for sedimentation on Mars. Furthermore, options for correctiong the errors using a combination of CFD and recent experiments conducted during the MarsSedEx III campaign are presented.