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Blowing in the Wind, 1, Velocities of Chondrule-Sized Particles in a Turbulent Protoplanetary Nebula
Small but macroscopic particles-chondrules, higher temperature mineral inclusions, metal grains and their like-dominate the fabric of primitive meteorites. The properties of these constituents, and their relationship to the fine dust grains which surround them, suggest that they led an extended exis...
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Published in: | Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962) N.Y. 1962), 2003-01, Vol.164, p.127-138 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Small but macroscopic particles-chondrules, higher temperature mineral inclusions, metal grains and their like-dominate the fabric of primitive meteorites. The properties of these constituents, and their relationship to the fine dust grains which surround them, suggest that they led an extended existence in a gaseous protoplanetary nebula prior to their incorporation into their parent primitive bodies. In this paper we explore in some detail the velocities acquired by such particles in a turbulent nebula. We treat velocities in inertial space (relevant to diffusion), velocities relative to the gas entrained microscopic dust (relevant to accretion of dust rims), and velocities relative to each other (relevant to collisions). We extend previous work by presenting explicit, closed-form solutions for the magnitude and size dependence of these velocities in this important particle size regime, and we compare these expressions with new numerical calculations. The magnitude and size dependence of these velocities have immediate applications to chondrule and CAI rimming by fine dust and to their diffusion in the nebula, which we explore separately. |
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ISSN: | 0019-1035 |