Collisional dust avalanches in debris discs

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Abstract

We quantitatively investigate how collisional avalanches may develop in debris discs as the result of the initial breakup of a plan-etesimal or comet-like object, triggering a collisional chain reaction due to outward escaping small dust grains. We use a specifically developed numerical code that follows both the spatial distribution of the dust grains and the evolution of their size-frequency distribution due to collisions. We investigate how strongly avalanche propagation depends on different parameters (e.g., amount of dust released in the initial breakup, collisional properties of dust grains, and their distribution in the disc). Our simulations show that avalanches evolve on timescales of ∼ 1000 years, propagating outwards following a spiral-like pattern, and that their amplitude exponentially depends on the number density of dust grains in the system. We estimate the probability of witnessing an avalanche event as a function of disc densities, for a gas-free case around an A-type star, and find that features created by avalanche propagation can lead to observable asymmetries for dusty systems with a β Pictoris-like dust content or higher. Characteristic observable features include: (i) a brightness asymmetry of the two sides for a disc viewed edge-on, and (ii) a one-armed open spiral or a lumpy structure in the case of face-on orientation. A possible system in which avalanche-induced structures might have been observed is the edge-on seen debris disc around HP 32297, which displays a strong luminosity difference between its two sides. © ESO 2006.

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APA

Grigorieva, A., Artymowicz, P., & Thébault, P. (2007). Collisional dust avalanches in debris discs. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 461(2), 537–549. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20065210

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