Mapping of lunar nighttime surface temperatures has revealed anomalously low nighttime temperatures around recently formed impact craters on the Moon. The thermophysically distinct “cold spots” provide a way of identifying the most recently formed impact craters. Over 2,000 cold spot source craters were measured with diameters ranging from 43 m to 2.3 km. Comparison of the crater size‐frequency distribution with crater chronology models and crater counts of superposed craters on the ejecta of the largest cold spot craters constrains the retention time of the cold spots to no more than ~0.5–1.0 Myr with smaller cold spots possibly retained for only few hundred kyr. This would suggest a relatively rapid impact gardening rate with regolith overturn depths exceeding ~5 cm over this time scale. We observe a longitudinal heterogeneity in the cold spot distribution that reflects the Moon's synchronous rotation with a higher density of cold spots at the apex of motion. The magnitude of the asymmetry indicates the craters formed from a population of objects with low mean encounter velocities ~8.4 km/s. The larger cold spots (D > 800 m) do not follow this trend, and are concentrated on the trailing farside. This could result from a shorter retention time for larger cold spots on the leading hemisphere due to the greater number of smaller, superposed impacts. Alternatively, the abundance of large cold spots on the trailing farside resulted from a swarm of 100‐m‐scale impactors striking the Moon within the last ~0.5 Myr.
On 26 September 2022, the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft struck Dimorphos, a satellite of the asteroid 65803 Didymos1. Because it is a binary system, it is possible to determine how much the orbit of the satellite changed, as part of a test of what is necessary to deflect an asteroid that might threaten Earth with an impact. In nominal cases, pre-impact predictions of the orbital period reduction ranged from roughly 8.8 to 17 min (refs. 2,3). Here we report optical observations of Dimorphos before, during and after the impact, from a network of citizen scientists’ telescopes across the world. We find a maximum brightening of 2.29 ± 0.14 mag on impact. Didymos fades back to its pre-impact brightness over the course of 23.7 ± 0.7 days. We estimate lower limits on the mass contained in the ejecta, which was 0.3–0.5% Dimorphos’s mass depending on the dust size. We also observe a reddening of the ejecta on impact.
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) were dispersed without any solvent in poly(tetramethylene ether glycol), (PTMEG) well above its melting point by ultrasonication in the pulse mode and different times. The polyol/CNT suspensions were used to prepare in situ polymerized thermoplastic polyurethane TPU/CNT nanocomposites with the CNT concentration of $ 0.05 vol%, much below the CNT geometrical percolation threshold calculated at 0.43 vol%. Results of rotational rheological measurements and ultraviolet-visible (UV-Vis) spectroscopy analysis revealed improvement in the nanoscale CNT dispersion with sonication time. Moreover, the optical microscopic images and sedimentation behavior for these samples pointed out to the formation of segregated CNT networks with different microstructures at different sonication times. Through-plane thermal conductivity measurements showed an increase in thermal conductivity of the in situ polymerized TPU/CNT nanocomposites from polyol/CNT suspensions with increasing sonication time followed by a decrease at long sonication times. Different models were used to evaluate the role of CNT dispersion state and created microstructure on thermal conductivity of nanocomposites. The formation of a segregated network at medium sonication times consisting of large CNT aggregates and small bundles increased the nanocomposite thermal conductivity up to 99.7%, while at longer sonication times, an increase in interfacial area with a corresponding increase in kapitza boundary resistance, effectively decreased the system thermal conductivity. POLYM. ENG. SCI.,
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