Dusty Disks around White Dwarfs I: Origin of Debris Disks
Ruobing Dong, Yan Wang, D. N.C. Lin, X.-W. Liu

TL;DR
This paper explores how debris disks around white dwarfs originate from the dynamical evolution of planetary systems, especially focusing on the migration and collision of planetesimals during stellar mass loss phases.
Contribution
It presents a new model for the formation of debris disks around white dwarfs through planetesimal migration and collision during stellar evolution.
Findings
Dust rings around white dwarfs can form from swept-up planetesimals in resonant orbits.
The model explains the observed dust ring around WD 2226-210 as a typical example.
Resonant trapping and collisions produce observable debris disks around white dwarfs.
Abstract
A significant fraction of the mature FGK stars have cool dusty disks at least an orders of magnitudes brighter than the solar system's outer zodiacal light. Since such dusts must be continually replenished, they are generally assumed to be the collisional fragments of residual planetesimals analogous to the Kuiper Belt objects. At least 10% of solar type stars also bear gas giant planets. The fraction of stars with known gas giants or detectable debris disks (or both) appears to increase with the stellar mass. Here, we examine the dynamical evolution of systems of long-period gas giant planets and residual planetesimals as their host stars evolve off the main sequence, lose mass, and form planetary nebula around remnant white dwarf cores. The orbits of distant gas giant planets and super-km-size planetesimals expand adiabatically. During the most intense AGB mass loss phase,…
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