Absorption Efficiencies of Forsterite. I: DDA Explorations in Grain Shape and Size
Sean S. Lindsay, Diane H. Wooden, David E. Harker, Michael S. Kelley,, Charles E. Woodward, Jim R. Murphy

TL;DR
This study uses the discrete dipole approximation to analyze how grain shape and size affect the spectral features of forsterite in the 8-40 μm range, aiding in astrophysical identification of grain characteristics.
Contribution
It systematically explores the influence of grain shape and size on spectral features of forsterite using DDA, establishing spectral shape classes for astrophysical applications.
Findings
Elongation affects spectral feature positions and shapes.
Increasing grain size shifts features to longer wavelengths.
Seven spectral shape classes are identified for different grain geometries.
Abstract
We compute the absorption efficiency (Qabs) of forsterite using the discrete dipole approximation (DDA) in order to identify and describe what characteristics of crystal grain shape and size are important to the shape, peak location, and relative strength of spectral features in the 8-40 {\mu}m wavelength range. Using the DDSCAT code, we compute Qabs for non-spherical polyhedral grain shapes with a_eff = 0.1 {\mu}m. The shape characteristics identified are: 1) elongation/reduction along one of three crystallographic axes; 2) asymmetry, such that all three crystallographic axes are of different lengths; and 3) the presence of crystalline faces that are not parallel to a specific crystallographic axis, e.g., non-rectangular prisms and (di)pyramids. Elongation/reduction dominates the locations and shapes of spectral features near 10, 11, 16, 23.5, 27, and 33.5 {\mu}m, while asymmetry and…
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