The formation of planetesimals requires the growth of dust particles through collisions. Micron-sized particles must grow by many orders of magnitude in mass. To understand and model the processes during this growth, both the mechanical properties and the interaction cross sections of aggregates with surrounding gas must be well understood. Recent advances in experimental (laboratory) studies now provide the background for pushing numerical aggregate models to a new level. We present the calibration of a previously tested model of aggregate dynamics. We use plastic deformation of surface asperities as the physical model to match the velocities needed for sticking with experimental results. The modified code is then used to compute ...
Context. In the very first steps of the formation of a new planetary system, dust agglomer...
Context. Collisions between porous dust aggregates are crucial for the evolution of protoplanetary d...
To study the evolution of protoplanetary dust aggregates, we performed experiments with up to 2600 c...
The formation of planetesimals requires the growth of dust particles through collisions. Micron-size...
Context. A highly favoured mechanism of planetesimal formation is collisional growth. Single dust gr...
Context. Within the sequential accretion scenario of planet formation, planets are build up through ...
Context. Bouncing collisions of dust aggregates within the protoplanetary disk may have a significan...
Context. The early planetesimal growth proceeds through a sequence of sticking collisions of dust ag...
The first macroscopic bodies in protoplanetary disks are dust aggregates. We report on a number of e...
We carry out three-dimensional Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics simulations of spherical homogeneous ...
Context. Collisions between dust particles may lead to agglomerate growth or fragmentation, dependin...
Context. In protoplanetary disks, dust grains coagulate with each other and grow to form aggregates....
The coagulation of dust aggregates occurs in various astrophysical environments. Each one is charac...
Context. The collisional evolution of submillimeter-sized porous dust aggregates is important in man...
The coagulation of dust aggregates occurs in various astrophysical environments. Each one is charact...
Context. In the very first steps of the formation of a new planetary system, dust agglomer...
Context. Collisions between porous dust aggregates are crucial for the evolution of protoplanetary d...
To study the evolution of protoplanetary dust aggregates, we performed experiments with up to 2600 c...
The formation of planetesimals requires the growth of dust particles through collisions. Micron-size...
Context. A highly favoured mechanism of planetesimal formation is collisional growth. Single dust gr...
Context. Within the sequential accretion scenario of planet formation, planets are build up through ...
Context. Bouncing collisions of dust aggregates within the protoplanetary disk may have a significan...
Context. The early planetesimal growth proceeds through a sequence of sticking collisions of dust ag...
The first macroscopic bodies in protoplanetary disks are dust aggregates. We report on a number of e...
We carry out three-dimensional Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics simulations of spherical homogeneous ...
Context. Collisions between dust particles may lead to agglomerate growth or fragmentation, dependin...
Context. In protoplanetary disks, dust grains coagulate with each other and grow to form aggregates....
The coagulation of dust aggregates occurs in various astrophysical environments. Each one is charac...
Context. The collisional evolution of submillimeter-sized porous dust aggregates is important in man...
The coagulation of dust aggregates occurs in various astrophysical environments. Each one is charact...
Context. In the very first steps of the formation of a new planetary system, dust agglomer...
Context. Collisions between porous dust aggregates are crucial for the evolution of protoplanetary d...
To study the evolution of protoplanetary dust aggregates, we performed experiments with up to 2600 c...