Effect of Dust Rotational Disruption by Radiative Torques and Implications for F-corona decrease revealed by the Parker Solar Probe

Abstract

The first-year results from the Parker Solar Probe (PSP) reveal a gradual decrease of F-coronal dust from distances of D=0.166-0.336 AU (or the inner elongations of 9.22- 18.69~R) to the Sun (Howard et al. 2019). Such a F-corona decrease cannot be explained by the dust sublimation scenario of the popular silicate composition that implies a dust-free-zone of boundary at heliocentric radius R 4-5R, but may be explained by appealing to various dust compositions with different sublimation fronts. In this paper, we present an additional explanation for the F-corona decrease using our newly introduced mechanism of dust destruction so-called Radiative Torque Disruption (RATD) mechanism. We demonstrate that RATD rapidly breaks large grains into nanoparticles so that they can be efficiently destroyed by nonthermal sputtering induced by bombardment of energetic protons from slow solar winds, which extends the dust-free-zone established by thermal sublimation to Rdfz 8R. Beyond this extended dust-free-zone, we find that the dust mass decreases gradually from R 42R toward the Sun due to partial removal of nanodust by nonthermal sputtering. The joint effect of RATD and nonthermal sputtering can successfully reproduce the gradual decrease of the F-corona between 19-9R observed by the PSP. Finally, the RATD mechanism can efficiently produce nanoparticles usually observed in the inner solar system.

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