Modelling Dust Evolution in Galaxies with a Multiphase, Inhomogeneous ISM
Svitlana Zhukovska, Clare Dobbs, Edward B. Jenkins, Ralf Klessen

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed model of dust evolution in the multiphase, inhomogeneous interstellar medium, incorporating dust growth, destruction, and observational constraints, to better understand dust dynamics in galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces an improved dust growth model considering temperature-dependent sticking coefficients and ion interactions, constrained by observational data, advancing understanding of dust evolution in galaxies.
Findings
Dust growth rates depend on grain size and temperature.
Ion-grain interactions significantly influence dust growth timescales.
Dust re-formation rates exceed stellar dust production, reaching a steady state.
Abstract
We develop a model of dust evolution in a multiphase, inhomogeneous ISM including dust growth and destruction processes. The physical conditions for grain evolution are taken from hydrodynamical simulations of giant molecular clouds in a Milky Way-like spiral galaxy. We improve the treatment of dust growth by accretion in the ISM to investigate the role of the temperature-dependent sticking coefficient and ion-grain interactions. From detailed observational data on the gas-phase Si abundances [Si/H]_{gas} measured in the local Galaxy, we derive a relation between the average [Si/H]_{gas} and the local gas density n(H) which we use as a critical constraint for the models. This relation requires a sticking coefficient that decreases with the gas temperature. The synthetic relation constructed from the spatial dust distribution reproduces the slope of -0.5 of the observed relation in cold…
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