Formulation of Non-steady-state Dust Formation Process in Astrophysical Environments
Abstract
The non-steady-state formation of small clusters and the growth of grains accompanied by chemical reactions are formulated under the consideration that the collision of key gas species (key molecule) controls the kinetics of dust formation process. The formula allows us to evaluate the size distribution and condensation efficiency of dust formed in astrophysical environments. We apply the formulation to the formation of C and MgSiO3 grains in the ejecta of supernovae, as an example, to investigate how the non-steady effect influences the formation process, condensation efficiency fcon, and average radius aave of newly formed grains in comparison with the results calculated with the steady-state nucleation rate. We show that the steady-state nucleation rate is a good approximation if the collision timescale of key molecule taucoll is much smaller than the timescale tausat with which the supersaturation ratio increases; otherwise the effect of the non-steady state becomes remarkable, leading to a lower fcon and a larger aave. Examining the results of calculations, we reveal that the steady-state nucleation rate is applicable if the cooling gas satisfies Lambda = tausat/taucoll > 30 during the formation of dust, and find that fcon and aave are uniquely determined by Lambdaon at the onset time ton of dust formation. The approximation formulae for fcon and aave as a function of Lambdaon could be useful in estimating the mass and typical size of newly formed grains from observed or model-predicted physical properties not only in supernova ejecta but also in mass-loss winds from evolved stars.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.