Explorations Beyond the Snow Line: Spitzer/IRS Spectra of Debris Disks Around Solar-Type Stars
S. M. Lawler, C. A. Beichman, G. Bryden, D. R. Ciardi, A. M. Tanner,, K. Y. L. Su, K. R. Stapelfeldt, C. M. Lisse, D. E. Harker

TL;DR
This study used Spitzer/IRS spectra to analyze debris disks around 152 solar-type stars, revealing the frequency, characteristics, and possible structures of dust disks, with implications for planetary system formation.
Contribution
First comprehensive IRS spectral survey of debris disks around solar-type stars, providing new insights into dust location, composition, and disk structure.
Findings
11.8% of stars show excess emission at 30-34 microns
Most excesses are featureless, indicating large grains
Cold dust at large distances is rare around these stars
Abstract
We have observed 152 nearby solar-type stars with the Infrared Spectrometer (IRS) on the Spitzer Space Telescope. Including stars that met our criteria but were observed in other surveys, we get an overall success rate for finding excesses in the long wavelength IRS band (30-34 micron) of 11.8% +/- 2.4%. The success rate for excesses in the short wavelength band (8.5-12 micron) is ~1% including sources from other surveys. For stars with no excess at 8.5-12 microns, the IRS data set 3 sigma limits of around 1,000 times the level of zodiacal emission present in our solar system, while at 30-34 microns set limits of around 100 times the level of our solar system. Two stars (HD 40136 and HD 10647) show weak evidence for spectral features; the excess emission in the other systems is featureless. If the emitting material consists of large (10 micron) grains as implied by the lack of spectral…
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