Drop tower experiments on fine basalt, coarse basalt, and glass beads at 150-1000 mm/s² show volume increases up to 19.6% at lower gravity, with sensitivity varying by particle size, roughness, and uniformity.
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Tidal breakup of cohesive rubble piles around white dwarfs imposes a 0.1-1 km maximum fragment size that sets the initial debris distribution and requires collisional grinding before Poynting-Robertson drag acts.
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Experiments on Settling of Granular and Cohesive Material in Low Gravity
Drop tower experiments on fine basalt, coarse basalt, and glass beads at 150-1000 mm/s² show volume increases up to 19.6% at lower gravity, with sensitivity varying by particle size, roughness, and uniformity.