American Astronomical Society Quick Search:Help  
The Astrophysical Journal
Athens/Institutional login
IOP login: Password:   
Create account | Alerts | Contact us
IOP Publishing | AAS Homepage | ApJ Homepage | This Journal | Search | Authors | Referees | Librarians | User Options | Help |

The Physics of Dust Coagulation and the Structure of Dust Aggregates in Space

C. Dominik et al 1997 ApJ 480 647-673   doi: 10.1086/303996  Help

   PDF (1.58 MB) | HTML | References | Articles citing this article

C. Dominik1 and A. G. G. M. Tielens2
1 Leiden Observatory, P.O. Box 9513, NL-2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
2 NASA Ames Research Center, Mail Stop 245-3, Moffett Field, CA 94035

ABSTRACT. Even though dust coagulation is a very important dust-processing mechanism in interstellar space and protoplanetary disks, there are still important parts of the physics involved that are poorly understood. This imposes a serious problem for model calculations of any kind. In this paper, we attempt to improve the situation by including the effects of tangential forces on the contact in some detail. These have been studied in recent papers. We summarize the main results from these papers and apply them to detailed simulations of the coagulation process and of collisions between dust aggregates. Our results show the following: (1) the growth of aggregates by monomers will normally not involve major restructuring of the aggregates, (2) the classical hit-and-stick assumption is reasonably valid for this case, (3) collisions of aggregates with each other or with large grains can lead to significant compaction, and (4) the results can be easily understood in terms of critical energies for different restructuring processes. We also derive a short summary that may be used as a recipe for determining the outcome of collisions in coagulation calculations. It is shown that turbulent velocity fields in interstellar clouds are capable of producing considerably compressed aggregates, while the small aggregates forming early on in the solar nebula will not be compacted by collisions. However, compaction provides an important energy sink in collisions of larger aggregates in the solar nebula.

Subject headings: circumstellar matter; dust, extinction; interplanetary medium; ISM: clouds; solar system: formation

Print publication: Issue 2 (1997 May 10)
Received 1996 September 6, accepted for publication 1996 December 9

Bookmark and Share Post to CiteUlike | Post to Connotea | Post to Bibsonomy

 

Find related articles





Article options

Authors & Referees

BEC Matters!Optics.org banner
 
Content finder
  Full Search
  Help


  
Setup information is available for Adobe Acrobat.
EndNote, ProCite ® and Reference Manager ® are registered trademarks of ISI Researchsoft.
Copyright © Institute of Physics and IOP Publishing Limited 2009 - electronic design and all rights in the EJs software.
© The American Astronomical Society ("AAS") - the names of any journals published by AAS and the content of all such journals.
Use of this service is subject to compliance with the terms and conditions of use. In particular, reselling and systematic downloading of files is prohibited.
Help: Cookies | Data Protection.