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17 January 2025
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0701385

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Formation of Cosmic Dust Bunnies
Authors Lorin S. Matthews ; Ryan L. Hayes ; Michael S. Freed ; Truell W. Hyde ; PDF only ; SLAC-SPIRES HEP ; to ; by ;
Date 12 Jan 2007
AbstractPlanetary formation is an efficient process now thought to take place on a relatively short astronomical time scale. Recent observations have shown that the dust surrounding a protostar emits more efficiently at longer wavelengths as the protoplanetary disk evolves, suggesting that the dust particles are coagulating into fluffy aggregates, "much as dust bunnies form under a bed." One poorly understood problem in this coagulation process is the manner in which micron-sized, charged grains form the fractal aggregate structures now thought to be the precursors of protoplanetary disk evolution. This study examines the characteristics of such fractal aggregates formed by the collision of spherical monomers and aggregates where the charge is distributed over the aggregate structure. The aggregates are free to rotate due to collisions and dipole-dipole electrostatic interactions. Comparisons are made for different precursor size distributions and like-charged, oppositelycharged, and neutral grains.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0701385
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