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Evolution of grains in a turbulent solar nebula
Authors:Stuart J Weidenschilling
Institution:Planetary Science Institute, Science Applications, Inc., 2030 E. Speedway, Suite 201, Tucson, Arizona 85719, USA
Abstract:In accretion disk models of the solar nebula, turbulence is driven by convective instability. This mechanism requires high opacity, which must be provided by solid grains. Evolution of the grain size distribution in a turbulent disk is computed numerically, using realistic collisional outcomes and strengths of grain aggregates, rather than an arbitrary “sticking efficiency.” The presence of turbulence greatly increases the rate of grain collisions; the coagulation rate is initially much greater than in a nonturbulent disk. Aggregates quickly reach sizes ~0.1–1 cm, but erosion and breakup in collisions prevent growth of larger bodies for plausible aggregate impact strengths. These aggregates are too small to settle to the plane of the disk, and planetesimal formation is impossible as long as the turbulence persists. However, the opacity of the disk is reduced by aggregate formation; some combinations of opacity law and surface density produce an optically thin disk, cutting off turbulent convection. The disk may experience alternating periods of turbulence and quiescence, as grains are depleted by coagulation and replenished by infall from the presolar cloud. Planetesimals can form only during the quiescent intervals; it is argued that such episodes were rare during the lifetime of the accretion disk.
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