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A&A 413, 571-591 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20031554
Radial mixing in protoplanetary accretion disks
IV. Metamorphosis of the silicate dust complex
H.-P. GailInstitut für Theoretische Astrophysik, Universität Heidelberg, Tiergartenstraße 15, 69121 Heidelberg, Germany
(Received 4 December 2002 / Accepted 29 August 2003 )
Abstract
The outer regions of protoplanetary accretion discs are formed by
material from the parent molecular cloud of the freshly forming stars. The
interstellar dust in this material is a mixture of species which does
not correspond to any kind of chemical equilibrium state between the solid and
gaseous phases. Mass accretion carries this material into the warm inner disc
zones where chemical and physical processes are activated which convert the
non-equilibrium solid-gas mixture into a chemical equilibrium mixture.
Part of the equilibrated material is then mixed outwards by turbulent diffusion
and large-scale circulation currents. This work specifically considers the
evolution of the main dust components, viz. from the interstellar mixture
of amorphous Mg-Fe-silicates, into a chemical equilibrium mixture of crystalline
Mg-silicates, and iron. The basic set of equations for calculating the evolution
of a mixture of silicates and iron is derived. Model calculations based on
stationary, one-zone
-discs are combined with the
advection-diffusion-reaction equations for
the dust evolution to study the interstellar to equilibrium dust conversion
and the radial mixing of equilibrated dust into the outer disc regions. This
determines the mixture of the main dust components which form the mineral
inventory of planetesimals. It is found that the results of the model
calculation for the resulting mineral mixture are in rough agreement with the
composition of matrix material of primitive meteorites and dust in cometary
nuclei.
Key words: accretion disks -- dust -- solar system: formation
SIMBAD Objects in preparation
© ESO 2004
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