Formation of chondrules in radiative shock waves I. First results, spherical dust particles, stationary shocks
H. Joham, E.A. Dorfi

TL;DR
This study models radiative shock waves in protoplanetary nebulae to understand chondrule formation, considering gas-dust interactions and heat conduction, aligning with cosmochemical constraints but lacking some cooling processes.
Contribution
First detailed radiation hydrodynamics model of chondrule heating in particle-rich shocks including heat conduction and gas-particle friction.
Findings
Shock heating consistent with cosmochemical constraints.
Narrow density and temperature range for effective heating.
Fast heating requires molecular gas and dust opacities.
Abstract
The formation of chondrules in the protoplanetary nebulae causes many questions concerning the formation process, the source of energy for melting the rims, and the composition of the origin material. The aim of this work is to explore the heating of the chondrule in a single precursor as is typical for radiation hydrodynamical shock waves. We take into account the gas-particle friction for the duration of the shock transition and calculate the heat conduction into the chondrules. These processes are located in the protoplanetary nebulae at a region around 2.5 AU, which is considered to be the most likely place of chondrule formation. The present models are a first step towards computing radiative shock waves occurring in a particle-rich environment. We calculated the shock waves using one-dimensional, time-independent equations of radiation hydrodynamics involving realistic gas and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
