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Dust Evolution in Protoplanetary Disks

4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

4 Pith papers citing it
abstract

(abridged) In the core accretion scenario for the formation of planetary rocky cores, the first step toward planet formation is the growth of dust grains into larger and larger aggregates and eventually planetesimals. Although dust grains are thought to grow from the submicron sizes typical of interstellar dust to micron size particles in the dense regions of molecular clouds and cores, the growth from micron size particles to pebbles and kilometre size bodies must occur in protoplanetary disks. This step in the formation of planetary systems is the last stage of solids evolution that can be observed directly in young extrasolar systems. In this chapter we review the constraints on the physics of grain-grain collisions as they have emerged from laboratory experiments and numerical computations. We then review the current theoretical understanding of the global processes governing the evolution of solids in protoplanetary disks, including dust settling, growth, and radial transport. The predicted observational signatures are summarized. We discuss recent developments in the study of grain growth in molecular cloud cores and in collapsing envelopes of protostars as these provide the initial conditions for the dust in disks. We discuss the observational evidence for the growth of grains in young disks from mm surveys, as well as the recent evidence of radial variations of the dust properties in disks. We include a brief discussion of the constraints on the small end of the grain size distribution and on dust settling as derived from optical and IR observations. The observations are discussed in the context of global dust evolution models, in particular we focus on the emerging evidence for a very efficient early growth of grains and the radial distribution of grain sizes in disks. We also highlight the limits of current models, including the need to slow the radial drift of grains.

years

2026 3 2024 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 4

representative citing papers

DiskMINT-GARDEN: Self-consistent Models to Estimate Disk Masses

astro-ph.EP · 2026-06-24 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

A new grid of disk models with grain-surface CO chemistry plus an ML inference tool produces gas mass estimates from ALMA observations that match independent dynamical and HD values without requiring extreme elemental depletion.

Astrochemical Study of Early Embedded Disks

astro-ph.SR · 2026-06-25 · unverdicted · novelty 3.0

The paper proposes the iSEEDs project to integrate machine learning with astrochemistry for extracting physical conditions and molecular abundances from protostellar disk datasets.

citing papers explorer

Showing 4 of 4 citing papers.

  • The Dust Mineralogy of Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS from JWST/MIRI Observations astro-ph.EP · 2026-06-25 · unverdicted · none · ref 58 · internal anchor

    JWST observations indicate that interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS has dust dominated by amorphous silicates similar to the ISM, unlike the crystalline silicate-rich dust in Solar System comets.

  • DiskMINT-GARDEN: Self-consistent Models to Estimate Disk Masses astro-ph.EP · 2026-06-24 · unverdicted · none · ref 93 · internal anchor

    A new grid of disk models with grain-surface CO chemistry plus an ML inference tool produces gas mass estimates from ALMA observations that match independent dynamical and HD values without requiring extreme elemental depletion.

  • Astrochemical Study of Early Embedded Disks astro-ph.SR · 2026-06-25 · unverdicted · none · ref 199 · internal anchor

    The paper proposes the iSEEDs project to integrate machine learning with astrochemistry for extracting physical conditions and molecular abundances from protostellar disk datasets.

  • An ALMA search for substructure and fragmentation in starless cores in Orion B North astro-ph.GA · 2024-04-21 · unverdicted · none · ref 103 · internal anchor

    ALMA survey finds 4 starless cores in Orion B North consistent with turbulent collapse simulations; virial analysis indicates Chamaeleon I cores are less bound with external pressure dominating unlike Orion B North and Ophiuchus.