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Collisional Time Scales in the Kuiper Disk and Their ImplicationsWe explore the rate of collisions among bodies in the present-day Kuiper Disk as a function of the total mass and population size structure of the disk. We find that collisional evolution is an important evolutionary process in the disk as a whole, and indeed, that it is likely the dominant evolutionary process beyond approx. 42 AU, where dynamical instability time scales exceed the age of the solar system. Two key findings we report from this modeling work are: that unless the disk's population structure is sharply truncated for radii smaller than approx. 1-2 km, collisions between comets and smaller debris are occurring so frequently in the disk, and with high enough velocities, that the small body (i.e., KM-class object) population in the disk has probably developed into a collisional cascade, thereby implying that the Kuiper Disk comets may not all be primordial, and that the rate of collisions of smaller bodies with larger 100 less R less 400 km objects (like 1992QB(sub 1) and its cohorts) is so low that there appears to be a dilemma in explaining how QB(sub 1)s could have grown by binary accretion in the disk as we know it. Given these findings, it appears that either the present-day paradigm for the formation of Kuiper Disk is failed in some fundamental respect, or that the present-day disk is no longer representative of the ancient structure from which it evolved. This in turn suggests the intriguing possibility that the present-day Kuiper Disk evolved through a more erosional stage reminiscent of the disks around the stars Beta Pictorus, alpha PsA, and alpha Lyr.
Document ID
19970010613
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
External Source(s)
Authors
Stern, S. Alan
(Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, CO United States)
Date Acquired
August 17, 2013
Publication Date
August 1, 1995
Publication Information
Publication: The Astronomical Journal
Publisher: Am. Astron. Soc.
Volume: 110
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0004-6256
Subject Category
Astronomy
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-203206
NAS 1.26:203206
Accession Number
97N15793
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NASw-4468
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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