Crossing barriers in planetesimal formation: The growth of mm-dust aggregates with large constituent grains
Tim Jankowski, Gerhard Wurm, Thorben Kelling, Jens Teiser, Walter, Sabolo, Pedro J. Guti\'errez, and Ivano Bertini

TL;DR
This study investigates how millimeter-sized dust aggregates with large grains collide and stick, providing insights into early planet formation processes through laboratory experiments at elevated temperatures and pressures.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental setup to observe collisions of levitating dust aggregates with large constituent grains, revealing high accretion efficiencies relevant to planetesimal formation.
Findings
Sticking probability around 32% for all impact energies studied.
Higher impact energy density increases sticking probability.
Aggregate disassembly can occur, potentially hindering growth.
Abstract
Collisions of mm-size dust aggregates play a crucial role in the early phases of planet formation. We developed a laboratory setup to observe collisions of dust aggregates levitating at mbar pressures and elevated temperatures of 800 K. We report on collisions between basalt dust aggregates of from 0.3 to 5 mm in size at velocities between 0.1 and 15 cm/s. Individual grains are smaller than 25 \mum in size. We find that for all impact energies in the studied range sticking occurs at a probability of 32.1 \pm 2.5% on average. In general, the sticking probability decreases with increasing impact parameter. The sticking probability increases with energy density (impact energy per contact area). We also observe collisions of aggregates that were formed by a previous sticking of two larger aggregates. Partners of these aggregates can be detached by a second collision with a probability of on…
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