Adding particle collisions to the formation of asteroids and Kuiper belt objects via streaming instabilities
Anders Johansen (Lund University), Andrew Youdin (Harvard-Smithsonian, Center for Astrophysics), Yoram Lithwick (Northwestern University)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new numerical algorithm to simulate particle collisions during planetesimal formation, demonstrating efficient formation of bound clumps with realistic sizes in protoplanetary disks.
Contribution
The authors develop a Monte Carlo-based collision algorithm for superparticles, enabling realistic modeling of collisions and energy dissipation in planetesimal formation simulations.
Findings
Superparticle collisions can be implemented efficiently.
Density inhomogeneities are maintained when relative shear velocity is subtracted.
Formation of gravitationally bound clumps with sizes up to several hundred kilometers.
Abstract
Modelling the formation of super-km-sized planetesimals by gravitational collapse of regions overdense in small particles requires numerical algorithms capable of handling simultaneously hydrodynamics, particle dynamics and particle collisions. While the initial phases of radial contraction are dictated by drag forces and gravity, particle collisions become gradually more significant as filaments contract beyond Roche density. Here we present a new numerical algorithm for treating momentum and energy exchange in collisions between numerical superparticles representing a high number of physical particles. We adopt a Monte Carlo approach where superparticle pairs in a grid cell collide statistically on the physical collision time-scale. Collisions occur by enlarging particles until they touch and solving for the collision outcome, accounting for energy dissipation in inelastic collisions.…
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