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Dust Near The Sun
Authors:Mann  Ingrid  Kimura  Hiroshi  Biesecker  Douglas A  Tsurutani  Bruce T  Grün  Eberhard  McKibben  R Bruce  Liou  Jer-Chyi  MacQueen  Robert M  Mukai  Tadashi  Guhathakurta  Madhulika  Lamy  Philippe
Institution:1.Institut für Planetologie, Westf?lische Wilhelms-Universit?t, Münster, Germany
;2.NOAA, Space Environment Center, Boulder, CO, USA
;3.Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA
;4.Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik, Heidelberg, Germany
;5.Department of Physics and Space Science Center, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, USA
;6.Lockheed Martin Space Operations, Houston, TX, USA
;7.Rhodes College, Memphis, TN, USA
;8.Graduate School of Science and Technology, Kobe University, Kobe, Japan
;9.NASA Headquarters, Washington D.C., USA
;10.Laboratoire d'Astrophysique Marseille, France
;
Abstract:We review the current knowledge and understanding of dust in the inner solar system. The major sources of the dust population in the inner solar system are comets and asteroids, but the relative contributions of these sources are not quantified. The production processes inward from 1 AU are: Poynting-Robertson deceleration of particles outside of 1 AU, fragmentation into dust due to particle-particle collisions, and direct dust production from comets. The loss processes are: dust collisional fragmentation, sublimation, radiation pressure acceleration, sputtering, and rotational bursting. These loss processes as well as dust surface processes release dust compounds in the ambient interplanetary medium. Between 1 and 0.1 AU the dust number densities and fluxes can be described by inward extrapolation of 1 AU measurements, assuming radial dependences that describe particles in close to circular orbits. Observations have confirmed the general accuracy of these assumptions for regions within 30° latitude of the ecliptic plane. The dust densities are considerably lower above the solar poles but Lorentz forces can lift particles of sizes < 5 μm to high latitudes and produce a random distribution of small grains that varies with the solar magnetic field. Also long-period comets are a source of out-of-ecliptic particles. Under present conditions no prominent dust ring exists near the Sun. We discuss the recent observations of sungrazing comets. Future in-situ experiments should measure the complex dynamics of small dust particles, identify the contribution of cometary dust to the inner-solar-system dust cloud, and determine dust interactions in the ambient interplanetary medium. The combination of in-situ dust measurements with particle and field measurements is recommended.
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