Tensile & shear strength of porous dust agglomerates
Alexander Seizinger, Roland Speith, Wilhelm Kley

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to determine the tensile and shear strength of porous dust aggregates, providing essential parameters for modeling planet formation processes.
Contribution
It offers the first ab-initio derived tensile and shear strength functions for porous dust aggregates, improving upon previous theoretical models.
Findings
Tensile strength matches laboratory data well.
Shear strength data is novel, with no prior experimental data available.
Results differ significantly from earlier theoretical models.
Abstract
Context.Within the sequential accretion scenario of planet formation, planets are build up through a sequence sticking collisions. The outcome of collisions between porous dust aggregates is very important for the growth from very small dust particles to planetesimals. In this work we determine the necessary material properties of dust aggregates as a function the porosity. Aims: Continuum models such as SPH that are capable of simulating collisions of macroscopic dust aggregates require a set of material parameters. Some of them such as the tensile and shear strength are difficult to obtain from laboratory experiments. The aim of this work is to determine these parameters from ab-initio molecular dynamics simulations. Methods: We simulate the behavior of porous dust aggregates using a detailed micro-physical model of the interaction of spherical grains that includes adhesion…
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