On the filtering and processing of dust by planetesimals 1. Derivation of collision probabilities for non-drifting planetesimals
Tristan Guillot (LAGRANGE), Shigeru Ida (TIOT), Chris W. Ormel

TL;DR
This paper derives collision probabilities for dust particles interacting with non-drifting planetesimals in circumstellar disks, revealing conditions under which dust filtering by planetesimals is efficient or inefficient depending on turbulence levels and planetesimal sizes.
Contribution
It provides new analytical expressions for dust-planetesimal collision probabilities across multiple regimes, enhancing understanding of dust filtering efficiency in different disk conditions.
Findings
Filtering is inefficient in standard turbulence conditions (α=10^{-2})
Filtering becomes efficient in weak turbulence (α=10^{-4}) under specific size regimes
Collision regimes depend on planetesimal size, dust size, and turbulence, affecting dust accretion onto planetesimals
Abstract
Context. Circumstellar disks are known to contain a significant mass in dust ranging from micron to centimeter size. Meteorites are evidence that individual grains of those sizes were collected and assembled into planetesimals in the young solar system. Aims. We assess the efficiency of dust collection of a swarm of non-drifting planetesimals {\rev with radii ranging from 1 to \,km and beyond. Methods. We calculate the collision probability of dust drifting in the disk due to gas drag by planetesimal accounting for several regimes depending on the size of the planetesimal, dust, and orbital distance: the geometric, Safronov, settling, and three-body regimes. We also include a hydrodynamical regime to account for the fact that small grains tend to be carried by the gas flow around planetesimals. Results. We provide expressions for the collision probability of dust by planetesimals…
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