The optical properties of dust: the effects of composition, size, and structure
N. Ysard, A. P. Jones, K. Demyk, T. Bout\'eraon, M. Koehler

TL;DR
This paper investigates how grain composition, size, and structure influence dust optical properties from visible to FIR wavelengths, highlighting the importance of detailed grain modeling for accurate astrophysical interpretations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the effects of grain characteristics on optical properties using exact methods like Mie theory and DDA, emphasizing the role of structure variations.
Findings
Porosity and elongation increase FIR opacity.
Aggregate size and monomer number influence optical properties.
Silicate features are sensitive to grain structure details.
Abstract
Grains are determinant for setting the chemical, physical, dynamical, and radiative properties of all the media in which they are present. Their influence depends on the grain composition, size, and geometrical structure which vary throughout the dust lifecycle. Grain growth arises in dense media as traced by an enhancement of the FIR emissivity and by cloudshine and coreshine. We investigate the imprint of the grain characteristics on the dust unpolarised optical properties from the visible to the FIR for isolated grains and aggregates. Using optical constants for both carbonaceous and silicate materials, we derive the absorption and scattering efficiencies, the asymmetry factor of the phase function, the albedo, and the mass opacity, using either Mie theory or DDA. We study the effects of the size, porosity and shape of the grains, and of the monomers constituting the aggregates, on…
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