The dust grain size - stellar luminosity trend in debris discs
Nicole Pawellek, Alexander V. Krivov

TL;DR
This study investigates how the ratio of minimum grain size to blowout size in debris discs varies with stellar luminosity, revealing a trend that is robust across different dust properties and supported by collisional simulations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the dust grain size-luminosity trend, proposing a method to estimate true disc radii and exploring physical explanations for the observed pattern.
Findings
The ratio s_min/s_blow decreases with increasing stellar luminosity.
The trend remains consistent despite variations in dust composition and porosity.
Collisional simulations support the observed trend and suggest higher dynamical excitation in discs around luminous stars.
Abstract
The cross section of material in debris discs is thought to be dominated by the smallest grains that can still stay in bound orbits despite the repelling action of stellar radiation pressure. Thus the minimum (and typical) grain size is expected to be close to the radiation pressure blowout size . Yet a recent analysis of a sample of Herschel-resolved debris discs showed the ratio to systematically decrease with the stellar luminosity from about ten for solar-type stars to nearly unity in the discs around the most luminous A-type stars. Here we explore this trend in more detail, checking how significant it is and seeking to find possible explanations. We show that the trend is robust to variation of the composition and porosity of dust particles. For any assumed grain properties and stellar parameters, we suggest a recipe of how…
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