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Levitation of Charged Dust Grains and its Implications in Lunar Environment
The surfaces of airless, non-magnetized bodies like the Moon are directly exposed to solar wind and ultraviolet radiation, causing surface dust grains to be electrically charged and levitated, whenever electric fields exceed the surface forces and gravity. For an improved understanding of the lunar dust environment, we study the surface charging processes using electrostatic modelling and present the results here. We apply Gauss's law to examine the dust levitation and compare the implications with those obtained using freespace capacitance of the particle. Calculating grain charge on surface by assuming its free-space capacitance is erroneous and is therefore inapplicable. The daytime surface potential during high solar activity is estimated to be ˜20 V, while the nighttime potential can be as high as -3.8 kV. The maximum radius of levitating particles is greatly affected by the method used to model the dust levitation. Using Gauss's approach, it comes out to be in the picometre range near the terminator, in contrast to existing calculations which estimate it to be in the nanometre to micrometer range. The LDEX provided no indication of 0.1 μm-sized particles near the terminator, as suggested previously from Apollo observations. This result is not inconsistent with our predictions based on Gauss's law. Hence, it still remains an open question whether dust levitation occurs on the Moon or not, and experiments are necessary on future lunar lander mission which provide direct measurement of surface potential and near-surface charged dust particles to confirm the same.
Keywords
Dust, Levitation, Lunar Environment, Photoemission, Plasma.
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