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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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Separating gas-giant and ice-giant planets by halting pebble accretion

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The disk population of the upper scorpius association

TL;DR: In this article, photometry at 3-24?m for all known members of the Upper Scorpius association (? ~ 11 Myr) is presented based on all images of these objects obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope and the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer.
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Collisions between gravity-dominated bodies. i. outcome regimes and scaling laws

TL;DR: In this article, the authors derived an analytic description of the dynamical outcome for any collision between gravity-dominated bodies and derived equations (scaling laws) to demarcate the transition between collision regimes and to describe the size and velocity distributions of the post-collision bodies.
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The debris disk around hr 8799

TL;DR: In this paper, a full suite of Spitzer observations were used to characterize the debris disk around HR 8799 and explore how its properties are related to the recently discovered set of three massive planets orbiting the star.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Formation of the Terrestrial Planets

TL;DR: In this paper, two growth mechanisms are identified for the development of the terrestrial planets: (1) gravitational instability leading to a collapse, and (2) gravitational accumulation caused by two-body collisions and coherence.
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Evidence for Mass-dependent Circumstellar Disk Evolution in the 5 Myr Old Upper Scorpius OB Association

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the Spitzer Space Telescope data to investigate the frequency and properties of circumstellar disks around stars with masses between 0.1 and 20 M at an age of 5 Myr, and identified 35 stars that have emission at 8 or 16 µm in excess of the stellar photosphere.
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Accretional Evolution of a Planetesimal Swarm

TL;DR: Spaute et al. as mentioned in this paper used a multi-zone simulation code to model numerically the accretion of a swarm of planetesimals in the region of the terrestrial planets.
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A Dust Ring around epsilon Eridani: Analog to the Young Solar System

TL;DR: In this article, a new submillimeter camera was used to image the nearby star epsilon Eridani, where a ring of dust is seen peaking at 60 AU from the star and with much lower emission inside 30 AU, and the total mass of the ring is at least ~0.01 M⊕ in dust.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mass Loss from Evolved Stars. III. Mass Loss Rates for 50 Stars from CO J = 1--0 Observations: Erratum

TL;DR: In this article, a 2.6 mm de longueur d'onde dans les directions de 105 etoiles evoluees froides was detected, in the presence of Mira of type M, deux sont des supergeantes, and le rest of them S ou carbone.
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