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Variations on Debris Disks: Icy Planet Formation at 30-150 AU for 1-3 M☉ Main-Sequence Stars

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TLDR
In this article, the authors describe the formation of icy planets and debris disks at 30-150 AU around 1-3 M☉ stars and show that collisional cascades produce debris disks with maximum luminosity 2 × 10−3 times the stellar luminosity.
Abstract
We describe calculations for the formation of icy planets and debris disks at 30-150 AU around 1-3 M☉ stars. Debris disk formation coincides with the formation of planetary systems. As protoplanets grow, they stir leftover planetesimals to large velocities. A cascade of collisions then grinds the leftovers to dust, forming an observable debris disk. Stellar lifetimes and the collisional cascade limit the growth of protoplanets. The maximum radius of icy planets, -->rmax ≈ 1750 km, is remarkably independent of initial disk mass, stellar mass, and stellar age. These objects contain 3%-4% of the initial mass in solid material. Collisional cascades produce debris disks with maximum luminosity ~ -->2 × 10−3 times the stellar luminosity. The peak 24 μm excess varies from ~1% times the stellar photospheric flux for 1 M☉ stars to ~50 times the stellar photospheric flux for 3 M☉ stars. The peak 70-850 μm excesses are ~30-100 times the stellar photospheric flux. For all stars, the 24-160 μm excesses rise at stellar ages of 5-20 Myr, peak at 10-50 Myr, and then decline. The decline is roughly a power law, -->f t−n with -->n ≈ 0.6–1.0. This predicted evolution agrees with published observations of A-type and solar-type stars. The observed far-IR color evolution of A-type stars also matches model predictions.

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Planet Formation around Binary Stars: Tatooine Made Easy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the characteristics of circumbinary orbits in the context of current planet formation scenarios and confirmed their predictions with a suite of representative simulations with NASA's Kepler satellite.
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Disk Radii and Grain Sizes in Herschel-Resolved Debris Disks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a sample of 34 debris disks spatially resolved in various Herschel programs to constrain them and derived the disk radii derived from the resolved images reveal a large dispersion, but no significant trend with the stellar luminosity.
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The Edgeworth-Kuiper debris disk

TL;DR: In this article, the Edgeworth-Kuiper belt (EKB) and its presumed dusty debris is a natural reference for extrsolar debris disks, and the authors re-analyze the current database of known transneptunian objects (TNOs) and employ a new algorithm to eliminate the inclination and distance selection effects in the known TNO populations to derive expected parameters of the “true” EKB.
References
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Numerical recipes

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Protostars and Planets VI

TL;DR: Protostars and Planets VI brings together more than 250 contributing authors at the forefront of their field, conveying the latest results in this research area and establishing a new foundation for advancing our understanding of stellar and planetary formation as mentioned in this paper.
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