Young stars in Epsilon Cha and their disks: disk evolution in sparse associations
M. Fang, R. van Boekel, J. Bouwman, Th. Henning, W. A. Lawson, A., Sicilia-Aguilar

TL;DR
This study investigates disk evolution around young stars in the Epsilon Cha association, revealing slower dissipation in sparse environments, grain growth, and correlations between grain size and accretion rates, providing insights into planet formation timescales.
Contribution
It combines new Spitzer and VLT data with literature to analyze dust properties and disk dissipation, highlighting environmental effects and grain evolution in young stellar disks.
Findings
Disks in sparse associations dissipate more slowly than in dense clusters.
Detected grain growth and crystallization in all Epsilon Cha members.
Positive correlation between grain size and accretion rate in disks.
Abstract
(abridge) The nearby young stellar association Epsilon Cha association has an estimated age of 3-5 Myr, making it an ideal laboratory to study the disk dissipation process and provide empirical constraints on the timescale of planet formation. We combine the available literature data with our Spitzer IRS spectroscopy and VLT/VISIR imaging data. The very low mass stars USNO-B120144.7 and 2MASS J12005517 show globally depleted spectral energy distributions pointing at strong dust settling. 2MASS J12014343 may have a disk with a very specific inclination where the central star is effectively screened by the cold outer parts of a flared disk but the 10 micron radiation of the warm inner disk can still reach us. We find the disks in sparse stellar associations are dissipated more slowly than those in denser (cluster) environments. We detect C_{2}H_{2} rovibrational band around 13.7 micron on…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
