The cold origin of the warm dust around epsilon Eridani
Martin Reidemeister, Alexander V. Krivov, Christopher C. Stark,, Jean-Charles Augereau, Torsten Loehne, Sebastian Mueller

TL;DR
This study models the origin of warm dust around epsilon Eridani, showing it likely originates from outer belt collisions and inward transport by stellar winds, with dust composition including ice and silicates.
Contribution
It demonstrates that warm dust can be explained by outer belt collisions and inward transport, regardless of the inner planet's orbit, and highlights the importance of mixed dust composition.
Findings
Models reproduce observed spectral energy distribution and brightness profiles.
Warm dust likely originates from outer belt and is transported inward.
Dust composition includes both ice and silicates.
Abstract
Context: The K2V star eps Eri hosts one known inner planet, an outer Kuiper belt analog, and an inner disk of warm dust. Spitzer/IRS measurements indicate that the warm dust is present at distances as close as a few AU from the star. Its origin is puzzling, since an "asteroid belt" that could produce this dust would be unstable because of the known inner planet. Aims: Here we test the hypothesis that the observed warm dust is generated by collisions in the outer belt and is transported inward by Poynting-Robertson (P-R) drag and strong stellar winds. Methods: We simulated a steady-state distribution of dust particles outside 10AU with a collisional code and in the inner region (r<10AU) with single-particle numerical integrations. By assuming homogeneous spherical dust grains composed of water ice and silicate, we calculated the thermal emission of the dust and compared it with…
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