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Collisions of gas particles with a drifting grain give rise to a mechanical torque on the grain. Recent work by Lazarian & Hoang showed that mechanical torques might play a significant role in aligning helical grains along the interstellar magnetic field direction, even in the case of subsonic drift. We compute the mechanical torques on 13 different irregular grains and examine their resulting rotational dynamics, assuming steady rotation about the principal axis of greatest moment of inertia. We find that the alignment efficiency in the subsonic drift regime depends sensitively on the grain shape, with more efficient alignment for shapes with a substantial mechanical torque even in the case of no drift. The alignment is typically more efficient for supersonic drift. A more rigorous analysis of the dynamics is required to definitively appraise the role of mechanical torques in grain alignment.
Interstellar dust grains are non-spherical and, in some environments, partially aligned along the direction of the interstellar magnetic field. Numerous alignment theories have been proposed, all of which examine the grain rotational dynamics. In 199
In the previous papers in this series, we found that radiative torques can play a major role in the alignment of grains with the interstellar magnetic field. Since the radiative torques can drive the grains to suprathermal rotational speeds, in previ
Radiative torques, due to the absorption and scattering of starlight, are thought to play a major role in the alignment of grains with the interstellar magnetic field. The absorption of radiation also gives rise to recoil torques, associated with the
Interstellar abundance determinations from fits to X-ray absorption edges often rely on the incorrect assumption that scattering is insignificant and can be ignored. We show instead that scattering contributes significantly to the attenuation of X-ra
Interstellar polarization in the optical/infrared has long been known to be due to asymmetrical dust grains aligned with the magnetic field and can potentially provide a resource effective way to probe both the topology and strength of the magnetic f