
TL;DR
This paper reviews the evidence for debris disks around stars, their implications for planetesimal and planetary system formation, and the physical processes affecting dust particles within these disks.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of debris disks, linking Solar system studies with exoplanetary systems, and discusses dust dynamics and evolution in gas-free environments.
Findings
Debris disks are common around stars of various types.
Planetesimal formation occurs under diverse conditions.
Dust particle dynamics influence disk structure and evolution.
Abstract
Extensive photometric stellar surveys show that many main sequence stars show emission at infrared and longer wavelengths that is in excess of the stellar photosphere; this emission is thought to arise from circumstellar dust. The presence of dust disks is confirmed by spatially resolved imaging at infrared to millimeter wavelengths (tracing the dust thermal emission), and at optical to near infrared wavelengths (tracing the dust scattered light). Because the expected lifetime of these dust particles is much shorter than the age of the stars (>10 Myr), it is inferred that this solid material not primordial, i.e. the remaining from the placental cloud of gas and dust where the star was born, but instead is replenished by dust-producing planetesimals. These planetesimals are analogous to the asteroids, comets and Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs) in our Solar system that produce the…
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