165 research outputs found
Grain Destruction in Interstellar Shocks
Interstellar shock waves can erode and destroy grains present in the shocked
gas, primarily as the result of sputtering and grain-grain collisions.
Uncertainties in current estimates of sputtering yields are reviewed. Results
are presented for the simple case of sputtering of fast grains being stopped in
cold gas. An upper limit is derived for sputtering of refractory grains in
C-type MHD shocks: shock speeds v_s \gtrsim 50 \kms are required for return
of more than 30\% of the silicate to the gas phase. Sputtering can also be
important for removing molecular ice mantles from grains in two-fluid MHD shock
waves in molecular gas. Recent estimates of refractory grain lifetimes against
destruction in shock waves are summarized, and the implications of these short
lifetimes are discussed.Comment: To appear in Shocks in Astrophysics, ed. T.J. Millar. Talk given at
conference Shocks in Astrophysics, Manchester, Jan. 1995. 13 pages with 6
figures: uuencoded compressed postscript. Also available as POPe-633 on
http://astro.princeton.edu/~library/prep.htm
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Temperture and Composition Dependence of the High Flux Plasma Sputtering Yield of Cu-Li Binary Alloys
High flux deuterium plasma sputtering and ion beam experiments have been performed on Cu-Li alloys to determine if the reduction in copper erosion previously predicted and observed in low flux ion beam experiments occurs at particle fluxes representative of an RFP first wall or tokamak limiter. Partial sputtering yields of the copper and lithium components have been measured as a function of alloy composition and sample temperature using optical plasma emission spectroscopy, weight loss and catcher foil techniques. It is found that the lithium sputtering yield increases with increasing sample temperature while the copper yield decreases by as much as two orders of magnitude. The temperature required to obtain the reduction in copper erosion is found to be a function of bulk lithium concentration. Consequences of these experimental results for anticipated erosion/redeposition properties are calculated, and the Cu-Li alloy in found to compare favorably with conventional low-Z materials
Dust in Supernovae and Supernova Remnants II: Processing and survival
Observations have recently shown that supernovae are efficient dust factories, as predicted for a long time by theoretical models. The rapid evolution of their stellar progenitors combined with their efficiency in precipitating refractory elements from the gas phase into dust grains make supernovae the major potential suppliers of dust in the early Universe, where more conventional sources like Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stars did not have time to evolve. However, dust yields inferred from observations of young supernovae or derived from models do not reflect the net amount of supernova-condensed dust able to be expelled from the remnants and reach the interstellar medium. The cavity where the dust is formed and initially resides is crossed by the high velocity reverse shock which is generated by the pressure of the circumstellar material shocked by the expanding supernova blast wave. Depending on grain composition and initial size, processing by the reverse shock may lead to substantial dust erosion and even complete destruction. The goal of this review is to present the state of the art about processing and survival of dust inside supernova remnants, in terms of theoretical modelling and comparison to observations
Approximations in modelling of light-ion reflection in numerical simulations planning for calorimetric measurements
A Universal Relation for the Sputtering Yield of Monatomic Solids at Normal Ion Incidence
Important Sputtering Yield Data for Tokamaks: A Comparison of Measurements and Estimates
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