Dust Growth and Dynamics in Protoplanetary Nebulae: Implications for Opacity, Thermal Profile and Gravitational Instability
Debanjan Sengupta, Sarah E. Dodson-Robinson, Yasuhiro Hasegawa, Neal, J. Turner

TL;DR
This study models dust growth and dynamics in protoplanetary disks to understand their impact on temperature, opacity, and gravitational stability, revealing that dust evolution can trigger instabilities.
Contribution
It introduces a Monte Carlo collision model combined with radiative transfer to analyze dust effects on disk thermal profiles and stability, highlighting the role of grain growth and settling.
Findings
Weak turbulence stirs small particles in the disk's upper layers.
Large particle growth increases millimeter-wavelength optical thickness.
Dust evolution can lower the Toomre Q, potentially triggering gravitational instabilities.
Abstract
In spite of making a small contribution to total protoplanetary disk mass, dust affects the disk temperature by controlling absorption of starlight. As grains grow from their initial ISM-like size distribution, settling depletes the disk's upper layers of dust and decreases the optical depth, cooling the interior. Here we investigate the effect of collisional growth of dust grains and their dynamics on the thermal and optical profile of the disk, and explore the possibility that cooling induced by grain growth and settling could lead to gravitational instability. We develop a Monte Carlo dust collision model with a weighting technique and allow particles to collisionally evolve through sticking and fragmentation, along with vertical settling and turbulent mixing. We explore two disk models, the MMEN (minimum-mass extrasolar nebula), and a "heavy" disk with higher surface density than…
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