date: 2010 November 17 (Wed) 16:00-17:00
room: Kobe University, Science and Technology Research Building #4-809
speaker: Akio K. Inoue (Osaka Sangyo Univ.)
organizer: Hiroshi Kimura
title: The origin of dust in galaxies
abstract: The origin of cosmic dust is a fundamental issue in planetary science. I revisit the origin of dust in galaxies, in particular, in the Milky Way by using a chemical evolution model of a galaxy. This model solves the time evolution of the amount of four components which are stars, intestellar medium, 'metal' (elements heavier than helium), and dust. I first show the shortage of the stellar dust production rate relative to the dust destruction rate by supernovae. If the dust growth by material accretion in molecular clouds is active, the observed dust amount at the solar neighbourhood is reproduced. I analytically identify the physical mechanism determining the dust content as the balance between the accretion growth and the supernova destruction. Thus, the dust content is independent of the stellar dust yield after the accretion growth becomes active. The timing of the growth activation is determined by the critical metal mass fraction which depends on the growth and destruction efficiencies. The solar system formation seems well after the activation and an enough dust would exist in the proto-solar nebula.