Effect of dust grain porosity on the appearance of protoplanetary disks
F. Kirchschlager, S. Wolf

TL;DR
This study models how porous dust grains in protoplanetary disks affect their temperature, spectral features, and polarization, revealing significant differences from spherical grains and implications for disk evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a radiative transfer model incorporating porous dust grains, highlighting their impact on observable disk properties and polarization patterns, which was not previously considered.
Findings
Porous grains increase optical flux compared to spherical grains.
Silicate feature profile depends on grain porosity.
Polarization degree increases fourfold with porosity.
Abstract
We theoretically analyze protoplanetary disks consisting of porous dust grains. In the analysis of observations of protoplanetary disks the dust phase is often assumed to consist of spherical grains, allowing one to apply the Mie scattering formalism. However, in reality, the shape of dust grains is expected to deviate strongly from that of a sphere. We investigate the influence of porous dust grains on the temperature distribution and observable appearance of protoplanetary disks for dust grain porosities of up to 60 %. We performed radiative transfer modeling to simulate the temperature distribution, spectral energy distribution, and spatially resolved intensity and polarization maps. The optical properties of porous grains were calculated using the method of discrete dipole approximation. We find that the flux in the optical wavelength range is for porous grains higher than for…
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