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We present a kinetic model of a disk of solid particles, orbiting a primary and experiencing inelastic collisions. In distinction to other collisional models that use a 2D (mass-sernimajor axis) binning and perform a separate analysis of the velocity (eccentricity, inclination) evolution, we choose mass and orbital elements as independent variables of a phase space. The distribution function in this space contains full information on the combined mass, spatial, and velocity distributions of particles. A general kinetic equation for the distribution function is derived, valid for any set of orbital elements and for any collisional outcome, specified by a single kernel function. The first implementation of the model utilizes a 3D phase space (mass-semimajor axis-eccentricity) and involves averages over the inclination and all angular elements. We assume collisions to be destructive, simulate them with available material- and size-dependent scaling laws, and include collisional damping. A closed set of kinetic equations for a mass-semimajor axis-eccentricity distribution is written and transformation rules to usual mass and spatial distributions of the disk material are obtained. The kinetic "core" of our approach is generic. It is possible to add inclination as an additional phase space variable, to include cratering collisions and agglomeration, dynamical friction and viscous stirring, gravity of large perturbers, drag forces, and other effects into the model. As a specific application, we address the collisional evolution of the classical population in the Edgeworth-Kuiper belt (EKB). We run the model for different initial disk's masses and radial profiles and different impact strengths of objects. Our results for the size distribution, collisional timescales, and mass loss are in agreement with previous studies. In particular, collisional evolution is found to be most substantial in the inner part of the EKB, where the separation size between the survivors over EKB ' s age and fragments of earlier collisions lies between a few and several tens of km. The size distribution in the EKB is not a single Dohnanyi-type power law, reflecting the size dependence of the critical specific energy in both strength and gravity regimes. The net mass loss rate of an evolved disk is nearly constant and is dominated by disruption of larger objects. Finally, assuming an initially uniform distribution of orbital eccentricities, we show that an evolved disk contains more objects in orbits with intermediate eccentricities than in nearly circular or more eccentric orbits. This property holds for objects of any size and is explained in terms of collisional probabilities. The effect should modulate the eccentricity distribution shaped by dynamical mechanisms, such as resonances and truncation of perihelia by Neptune. (c) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
Structures induced by small moonlets in Saturn's rings : implications for the Cassini Mission
(2005)
Particle simulations are carried out to study density features caused by small moonlets embedded in a dense planetary ring. The creation of a "propeller" like structure is found together with adjacent density wakes. Both features are clear indications for the existence of moonlets in the rings. We confirmed that the propeller scales with the Hill-radius in radial direction whereas its azimuthal extent is determined by the ratio between the moonlet-mass and the ring-viscosity. Our findings bear direct implications for the analysis of the Cassini imaging (ISS) and occultation (UVIS) data: (i) for the detection of embedded larger bodies (>30 m) in Saturn's rings, and (ii) for remotely probing transport properties of the rings. The existence of a moonlet population may point to a catastrophic disruption of a parent body as a formation scenario for rings
This paper focuses on tenuous dust clouds of Jupiter's Galilean moons Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. In a companion paper (Sremcevic et al., Planet. Space Sci. 51 (2003) 455-471) an analytical model of impact-generated ejecta dust clouds surrounding planetary satellites has been developed. The main aim of the model is to predict the asymmetries in the dust clouds which may arise from the orbital motion of the parent body through a field of impactors. The Galileo dust detector data from flybys at Europa, Ganymede and Callisto are compatible with the model, assuming projectiles to be interplanetary micrometeoroids. The analysis of the data suggests that two interplanetary impactor populations are most likely the source of the measured dust clouds: impactors with isotropically distributed velocities and micrometeoroids in retrograde orbits. Other impactor populations, namely those originating in the Jovian system, or interplanetary projectiles with low orbital eccentricities and inclinations, or interstellar stream particles, can be ruled out by the statistical analysis of the data. The data analysis also suggests that the mean ejecta velocity angle to the normal at the satellite surface is around 30°, which is in agreement with laboratory studies of the hypervelocity impacts. © 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved