Evolution of interstellar dust and stardust in the solar neighbourhood
Svitlana Zhukovska, Hans-Peter Gail, Mario Trieloff

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of interstellar dust in the Milky Way, highlighting the dominant role of molecular cloud accretion and analyzing the origins of presolar grains in the Solar System.
Contribution
It develops a comprehensive chemical evolution model incorporating dust formation from stars, supernovae, and molecular clouds, providing new insights into dust origins and composition in the Solar System.
Findings
Interstellar dust is mainly accreted in molecular clouds.
Most Solar System dust lacks isotopic anomalies, indicating a non-stellar origin.
Condensation efficiency in supernova ejecta is low for most dust species.
Abstract
The abundance evolution of interstellar dust species originating from stellar sources and from condensation in molecular clouds in the local interstellar medium of the Milky Way is studied and the input of dust material to the Solar System is determined. A one-zone chemical evolution model of the Milky Way for the elemental composition of the disk combined with an evolution model for its interstellar dust component similar to that of Dwek (1998) is developed. The dust model considers dust-mass return from AGB stars as calculated from synthetic AGB models combined with models for dust condensation in stellar outflows. Supernova dust formation is included in a simple parameterized form which is gauged by observed abundances of presolar dust grains with supernova origin. For dust growth in the ISM a simple method is developed for coupling this with disk and dust evolution models. The time…
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