TL;DR
This study investigates how thermal radiation pressure from asteroid regolith can cause small dust particles, especially around near-Sun asteroids like Phaethon, to escape into space, highlighting a potential dust removal mechanism.
Contribution
The paper develops new formalisms to quantify thermal radiation pressure effects on small dust particles on asteroids, emphasizing near-Sun conditions and particle sizes of 1-10 μm.
Findings
Thermal radiation dominates particle acceleration for <1 μm to 10 μm particles near the Sun.
Particles of about 1 μm radius are most strongly accelerated outward.
Simulations suggest such particles can escape asteroid gravity within about 10 minutes.
Abstract
Context. Recent observations of dust ejections from active asteroids, including (3200) Phaethon, have drawn considerable interest from planetary astronomers studying the generation and removal of small dust particles on asteroids. Aims. In this work, we aim to investigate the importance of thermal radiation pressure from asteroid regolith (AR) acting on small dust particles over the surface of the AR. In particular, we aim to understand the role of thermal radiation in the near-Sun environment. Methods. We describe the acceleration of particles over the AR within the radiation fields (direct solar, reflected (scattered) solar, and thermal radiation) in addition to the asteroid's rotation and gravitational field. Mie theory is used because the particles of interest have sizes comparable to thermal wavelengths (~1-100 {\mu}m), and thus the geometric approximation is not applicable. A new…
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