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Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of Debris Disks

TLDR
In this article, a review describes the theoretical framework within which debris disk evolution takes place and shows how that framework has been constrained by observations, including infrared photometry of large numbers of debris disks, providing snapshots of the dust present at different evolutionary phases.
Abstract
Circumstellar dust exists around several hundred main sequence stars. For the youngest stars, that dust could be a remnant of the protoplanetary disk. Mostly it is inferred to be continuously replenished through collisions between planetesimals in belts analogous to the Solar System’s asteroid and Kuiper belts, or in collisions between growing protoplanets. The evolution of a star’s debris disk is indicative of the evolution of its planetesimal belts and may be influenced by planet formation processes, which can continue throughout the first gigayear as the planetary system settles to a stable configuration and planets form at large radii. Evidence for that evolution comes from infrared photometry of large numbers of debris disks, providing snapshots of the dust present at different evolutionary phases, as well as from images of debris disk structure. This review describes the theoretical framework within which debris disk evolution takes place and shows how that framework has been constrained by observations.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Protoplanetary Disks and Their Evolution

TL;DR: A review of the outer parts, beyond 1 AU, of protoplanetary disks with a focus on recent IR and (sub)millimeter results can be found in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Giant Planet Imaged in the Disk of the Young Star β Pictoris

TL;DR: It is shown that the ~10-million-year-oldβ Pictoris system hosts a massive giant planet, β Pictoris b, located 8 to 15 astronomical units from the star, which confirms that gas giant planets form rapidly within disks and validates the use of disk structures as fingerprints of embedded planets.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Ages of Stars

TL;DR: A summary of the available techniques for age-dating stars and ensembles of stars, their realms of applicability, and their strengths and weaknesses can be found in this article, where the authors focus on low-mass stars.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Resolved Debris Disk around the G2 V Star HD 107146

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the HST/ACS coronagraph to resolve scattered-light images of the debris disk around HD 107146, a G2 star 28.5 pc from the Sun.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accretion of Interplanetary Dust Particles by the Earth

TL;DR: Grun et al. as mentioned in this paper found that a large and perhaps the dominant fraction of the interplanetary dust particles encountered by Earth comes from the asteroid families Eos, Themis, and Koronis and that probably fewer than 25% of accreted IDPs come from comets.
Journal ArticleDOI

Braking the Gas in the beta Pictoris Disk

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that all species affected by radiation force are heavily ionized and dynamically coupled into a single fluid by Coulomb collisions, reducing the radiation force on species feeling the strongest acceleration.
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The age dependence of the Vega phenomenon: Observations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study the time dependency of Vega-like excesses using infrared studies obtained with the imaging photopolarimeter ISOPHOT on board of ISO and conclude that for stars at most ages, a large spread in fractional luminosity occurs, but very young stars with intermediate or small excesses.
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