Collisional damping in debris discs: Only significant if collision velocities are low
Marija R. Jankovic, Mark C. Wyatt, Torsten L\"ohne

TL;DR
This paper investigates how collisional damping affects the vertical thickness of debris discs, finding it is significant only when collision velocities are low, with implications for disc observations.
Contribution
It extends a kinetic model to include orbital inclination evolution, analyzing the conditions under which collisional damping influences debris disc structure.
Findings
Collisional damping is ineffective if projectiles are much less massive than targets.
Discs with low Yc retain their initial inclination distribution longer.
Efficient damping requires collision velocities below ~40 m/s for millimetre-sized grains.
Abstract
Context. Dusty debris discs around main sequence stars are observed to vary widely in terms of their vertical thickness. Their vertical structure may be affected by damping in inelastic collisions. Although kinetic models have often been used to study the collisional evolution of debris discs, these models have not yet been used to study the evolution of their vertical structure. Aims. We extend an existing implementation of a kinetic model of collisional evolution to include the evolution of orbital inclinations and we use this model to study the effects of collisional damping in pre-stirred discs. Methods. We evolved the number of particles of different masses, eccentricities, and inclinations using the kinetic model and used Monte Carlo simulations to calculate collision rates between particles in the disc. We considered all relevant collisional outcomes including fragmentation,…
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