Planetesimal formation by sweep-up: How the bouncing barrier can be beneficial to growth
Fredrik Windmark, Til Birnstiel, Carsten G\"uttler, J\"urgen Blum,, Cornelis P. Dullemond, Thomas Henning

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the bouncing barrier in dust collisions can actually facilitate planetesimal formation by enabling larger bodies to sweep up smaller particles, especially when small seeds are present, leading to 100-meter bodies in 1 million years.
Contribution
It introduces a new dust collision model incorporating fragmentation with mass transfer, showing how the bouncing barrier can promote growth under certain conditions.
Findings
Small seed particles can catalyze growth of larger bodies.
Bouncing collisions prevent excessive growth of large particles.
Planetesimals of 100 meters can form within 1 million years at 3 AU.
Abstract
The formation of planetesimals is often accredited to collisional sticking of dust grains. The exact process is unknown, as collisions between larger aggregates tend to lead to fragmentation or bouncing rather than sticking. Recent laboratory experiments have however made great progress in the understanding and mapping of the complex physics involved in dust collisions. We want to study the possibility of planetesimal formation using the results from the latest laboratory experiments, particularly by including the fragmentation with mass transfer effect, which might lead to growth even at high impact velocities. We present a new experimentally and physically motivated dust collision model capable of predicting the outcome of a collision between two particles of arbitrary masses and velocities. It is used together with a continuum dust-size evolution code that is both fast in terms of…
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