A Submillimetre Search for Cold Extended Debris Disks in the Beta Pictoris Moving Group
R. Nilsson (1), R. Liseau (2), A. Brandeker (1), G. Olofsson (1), C., Risacher (3), M. Fridlund (4), G. Pilbratt (4) ((1) Department of Astronomy,, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden, (2) Onsala Space Observatory,, Chalmers University of Technology, Onsala, Sweden, (3) SRON

TL;DR
This study used submillimetre observations to detect and analyze cold, extended debris disks around young stars in the Beta Pictoris Moving Group, providing insights into dust mass and disk evolution.
Contribution
First submillimetre survey of Beta Pictoris Moving Group debris disks, revealing cold dust properties and disk evolution trends.
Findings
Detected three debris disks with high confidence.
Estimated dust masses and temperature profiles.
Observed decline in dust luminosity with stellar age.
Abstract
The Beta Pictoris Moving Group is a nearby stellar association of young (12Myr) co-moving stars including the classical debris disk star beta Pictoris. Due to their proximity and youth they are excellent targets when searching for submillimetre emission from cold, extended, dust components produced by collisions in Kuiper-Belt-like disks. They also allow an age independent study of debris disk properties as a function of other stellar parameters. We observed 7 infrared-excess stars in the Beta Pictoris Moving Group with the LABOCA bolometer array, operating at a central wavelength of 870 micron at the 12-m submillimetre telescope APEX. The main emission at these wavelengths comes from large, cold dust grains, which constitute the main part of the total dust mass, and hence, for an optically thin case, make better estimates on the total dust mass than earlier infrared observations.…
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