Collisional Evolution of the Inner Zodiacal Cloud
The zodiacal cloud is one of the largest structures in the solar system and strongly governed by meteoroid collisions near the Sun. Collisional erosion occurs throughout the zodiacal cloud, yet it is historically difficult to directly measure and has never been observed for discrete meteoroid stream...
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Zusammenfassung: | The zodiacal cloud is one of the largest structures in the solar system and
strongly governed by meteoroid collisions near the Sun. Collisional erosion
occurs throughout the zodiacal cloud, yet it is historically difficult to
directly measure and has never been observed for discrete meteoroid streams.
After six orbits with Parker Solar Probe (PSP), its dust impact rates are
consistent with at least three distinct populations: bound zodiacal dust grains
on elliptic orbits ($\alpha$-meteoroids), unbound $\beta$-meteoroids on
hyperbolic orbits, and a third population of impactors that may either be
direct observations of discrete meteoroid streams, or their collisional
byproducts ("$\beta$-streams"). $\beta$-streams of varying intensities are
expected to be produced by all meteoroid streams, particularly in the inner
solar system, and are a universal phenomenon in all exozodiacal disks. We find
the majority of collisional erosion of the zodiacal cloud occurs in the range
of $10-20$ solar radii and expect this region to also produce the majority of
pick-up ions due to dust in the inner solar system. A zodiacal erosion rate of
at least $\sim$100 kg s$^{-1}$ and flux of $\beta$-meteoroids at 1 au of
$0.4-0.8 \times 10^{-4}$ m$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$ is found to be consistent with the
observed impact rates. The $\beta$-meteoroids investigated here are not found
to be primarily responsible for the inner source of pick-up ions, suggesting
nanograins susceptible to electromagnetic forces with radii below $\sim$50 nm
are the inner source of pick-up ions. We expect the peak deposited energy flux
to PSP due to dust to increase in subsequent orbits, up to 7 times that
experienced during its sixth orbit. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2104.08217 |