Simulations of micrometeoroid interactions with the Earth atmosphere
G. Briani, E. Pace (Univ. di Firenze), S. N. Shore (Univ. di Pisa,, INFN-Pisa), G. Pupillo (INAF - Istituto di Radioastronomia), A. Passaro (Alta, S. p. A.), S. Aiello (Univ. di Firenze)

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive numerical model to simulate micrometeoroid interactions with Earth's atmosphere, analyzing physical processes affecting their survival and identifying key factors influencing mass loss and thermal history.
Contribution
The study introduces a general numerical model that integrates multiple physical processes to better understand micrometeoroid atmospheric entry and survival.
Findings
Low entry velocities and grazing angles increase survival chances.
Melting is the dominant mass loss mechanism for surviving micrometeoroids.
Sputtering has negligible impact on mass loss.
Abstract
Micrometeoroids (cosmic dust with size between a few m and 1 mm) dominate the annual extraterrestrial mass flux to the Earth. We investigate the range of physical processes occurring when micrometeoroids traverse the atmosphere. We compute the time (and altitude) dependent mass loss, energy balance, and dynamics to identify which processes determine their survival for a range of entry conditions. We develop a general numerical model for the micrometeoroid-atmosphere interaction. The equations of motion, energy, and mass balance are simultaneously solved for different entry conditions (e.g. initial radii, incident speeds and angles). Several different physical processes are taken into account in the equation of energy and in the mass balance, in order to understand their relative roles and evolution during the micrometeoroid-atmosphere interaction. In particular, to analyze…
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