The Nature of Transition Circumstellar Disks II. Southern Molecular Clouds
Gisela A. Romero, Matthias R. Schreiber, Lucas A. Cieza, Alberto, Rebassa-Mansergas, Bruno Mer\'in, Anal\'ia V. Smith Castelli, Lori E. Allen, and Nidia Morrell

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties and origins of transition circumstellar disks in various southern molecular clouds, revealing their diversity and potential mechanisms like planet formation, grain growth, and photoevaporation through multifrequency observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multifrequency analysis of transition disks across multiple clouds, identifying their diversity and possible formation mechanisms with new observational data.
Findings
Transition disks show diverse spectral energy distributions.
Disk masses range from less than 1 to 10 Jupiter masses.
Several disks are candidates for harboring giant planets.
Abstract
Transition disk objects are pre-main-sequence stars with little or no near-IR excess and significant far-IR excess, implying inner opacity holes in their disks. Here we present a multifrequency study of transition disk candidates located in Lupus I, III, IV, V, VI, Corona Australis, and Scorpius. Complementing the information provided by Spitzer with adaptive optics (AO) imaging (NaCo, VLT), submillimeter photometry (APEX), and echelle spectroscopy (Magellan, Du Pont Telescopes), we estimate the multiplicity, disk mass, and accretion rate for each object in our sample in order to identify the mechanism potentially responsible for its inner hole. We find that our transition disks show a rich diversity in their spectral energy distribution morphology, have disk masses ranging from lsim1 to 10 M JUP, and accretion rates ranging from lsim10-11 to 10-7.7 M \odot yr-1. Of the 17 bona fide…
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