Since the classical work by Purcell (1979) it has been generally accepted
that most interstellar grains rotate suprathermally. Suprathermally rotating
grains would be nearly perfectly aligned with the magnetic field by
paramagnetic dissipation if not for ``crossovers'', intervals of low angular
velocity resulting from reversals of the torques responsible for suprathermal
rotation; during crossovers grains are susceptible to disalignment by random
impulses.
Lazarian and Draine (1997) identified thermal fluctuations within grain
material as an important component of crossover dynamics. For grains of size
less than 0.1 micron, these fluctuations ensure good correlation of angular
momentum before and after crossover resulting in good alignment, in accord with
observations of starlight polarization. In the present paper we discuss two new
processes which are important for the dynamics of grains with a<0.1 micron. The
first -- ``thermal flipping'' -- offers a way for small grains to bypass the
period of greatly reduced angular momentum which would otherwise take place
during a crossover, thereby enhancing the alignment of small grains. The second
effect -- ``thermal trapping'' -- arises when thermal flipping becomes rapid
enough to prevent the systematic torques from driving the grain to suprathermal
rotation. This effect acts to reduce the alignment of small grains.
The observed variation of grain alignment with grain size would then result
from a combination of the thermal flipping process -- which suppresses
suprathermal rotation of small grains -- and due to molecular hydrogen
formation and starlight -- which drive large grains to suprathermal rotation
rates.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, submitted ApJ