Multiwavelength optical properties of compact dust aggregates in protoplanetary disks
M. Min, Ch. Rab, P. Woitke, C. Dominik, F. M\'enard

TL;DR
This paper investigates the optical properties of dust aggregates in protoplanetary disks using detailed computations and compares them with approximate methods to improve interpretation of disk observations and understand early planet formation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of dust aggregate optical properties using the discrete dipole approximation and evaluates the accuracy of approximate methods for observational analysis.
Findings
Approximate methods cannot fully replicate detailed aggregate optical properties.
Scattering phase function asymmetry indicates aggregate size.
Degree of polarization relates to constituent particle size.
Abstract
In protoplanetary disks micron-size dust grains coagulate to form larger structures with complex shapes and compositions. The coagulation process changes the absorption and scattering properties of particles in the disk in significant ways. To properly interpret observations of protoplanetary disks and to place these observations in the context of the first steps of planet formation, it is crucial to understand the optical properties of these complex structures. We derive the optical properties of dust aggregates using detailed computations of aggregate structures and compare these computa- tionally demanding results with approximate methods that are cheaper to compute in practice. In this way we wish to understand the merits and problems of approximate methods and define the context in which they can or cannot be used to analyze observations of objects where significant grain growth is…
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