On origin and destruction of relativistic dust and its implication for ultrahigh energy cosmic rays
Thiem Hoang, A. Lazarian, and R. Schlickeiser

TL;DR
This paper investigates the acceleration and destruction of relativistic dust grains, concluding they are unlikely to be primary particles of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays due to destruction mechanisms in various environments.
Contribution
It provides updated calculations of maximum relativistic speeds of dust grains and analyzes their destruction processes, challenging their role as UHECR primaries.
Findings
Grains can reach Lorentz factors less than 2, lower than previous estimates.
Destruction by sublimation, Coulomb explosions, and grain collisions is significant.
Relativistic dust is likely destroyed before reaching Earth, making it an unlikely UHECR source.
Abstract
Dust grains may be accelerated to relativistic speeds by radiation pressure, diffusive shocks, and other acceleration mechanisms. Such relativistic grains have been suggested as primary particles of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays (UHECRs). In this paper, we first revisit the problem of acceleration by radiation pressure and calculate maximum grain velocities achieved. We find that grains can be accelerated to relativistic speeds with Lorentz factor by powerful radiation sources, which is lower than earlier estimates showing that could reach . We then investigate different destruction mechanisms for relativistic grains traversing a variety of environments. In solar radiation, we find that the destruction by thermal sublimation and Coulomb explosions is important. We also quantify grain destruction due to electronic sputtering by ions and grain-grain…
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