On the Evolution of Dust Mineralogy, From Protoplanetary Disks to Planetary Systems
Isa Oliveira, Johan Olofsson, Klaus M. Pontoppidan, Ewine F. van, Dishoeck, Jean-Charles Augereau, Bruno Merin

TL;DR
This study investigates dust mineralogy evolution in protoplanetary disks across different stellar clusters, revealing early crystallinity establishment and no significant change with age, informing planet formation theories.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of dust mineralogy in multiple star-forming regions, highlighting early crystallinity and its independence from disk age.
Findings
Crystallinity fractions are similar (~10-20%) across regions.
No increase in crystallinity with age in 1-8 Myr range.
Early crystallinity (~<1 Myr) reaches equilibrium.
Abstract
Mineralogical studies of silicate features emitted by dust grains in protoplanetary disks and Solar System bodies can shed light on the progress of planet formation. The significant fraction of crystalline material in comets, chondritic meteorites and interplanetary dust particles indicates a modification of the almost completely amorphous ISM dust from which they formed. The production of crystalline silicates thus must happen in protoplanetary disks, where dust evolves to build planets and planetesimals. Different scenarios have been proposed, but it is still unclear how and when this happens. This paper presents dust grain mineralogy of a complete sample of protoplanetary disks in the young Serpens cluster. These results are compared to those in the young Taurus region and to sources that have retained their protoplanetary disks in the older Upper Scorpius and Eta Chamaeleontis…
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