Growth-fragmentation processes describe the evolution of systems of cells
which grow continuously and fragment suddenly; they are used in models of cell
division and protein polymerisation. Typically, we may expect that in the long
run, the concentrations of cells with given masses increase at some exponential
rate, and that, after compensating for this, they arrive at an asymptotic
profile. Up to now, this question has mainly been studied for the average
behavior of the system, often by means of a natural partial
integro-differential equation and the associated spectral theory. However, the
behavior of the system as a whole, rather than only its average, is more
delicate. In this work, we show that a criterion found by one of the authors
for exponential ergodicity on average is actually sufficient to deduce stronger
results about the convergence of the entire collection of cells to a certain
asymptotic profile, and we find some improved explicit conditions for this to
occur