Rotational disruption of dust grains by mechanical torques for high-velocity gas-grain collisions
Thiem Hoang, Hyeseung Lee

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new mechanism called Mechanical Torque Disruption (METD) where suprathermal rotation caused by gas-grain collisions can fragment small dust grains at high velocities, surpassing destruction by sputtering.
Contribution
It presents the novel METD mechanism, demonstrating its efficiency in destroying small dust grains at high velocities, especially in shock environments, which was not considered in prior models.
Findings
METD is more effective than sputtering for grains smaller than 10 nm at velocities below 500 km/s.
The disruption timescale ratio depends on grain tensile strength, size, and velocity.
METD's efficiency decreases at velocities above 500 km/s due to partial momentum transfer.
Abstract
Dust grains moving at hypersonic velocities of through an ambient gas are known to be destroyed by nonthermal sputtering. Yet, previous studies of nonthermal sputtering disregarded the fact that dust grains can be spun-up to suprathermal rotation by stochastic mechanical torques from gas-grain collisions. In this paper, we show that such grain suprathermal rotation can disrupt a small grain into small fragments because induced centrifugal stress exceeds the maximum tensile strength of grain material, . We term this mechanism {\it MEchanical Torque Disruption} (METD). We find that METD is more efficient than nonthermal sputtering in destroying smallest grains ( nm) of nonideal structures moving with velocities of . The ratio of rotational disruption to sputtering time is $\tau_{\rm disr}/\tau_{\rm sp}\sim…
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