The Herschel DIGIT Survey of Weak-line T Tauri Stars: implications for disk evolution and dissipation
Lucas A. Cieza, Johan Olofsson, Paul M. Harvey, Neal J. Evans II, Joan, Najita, Thomas Henning, Bruno Merin, Armin Liebhart, Manuel Gudel,, Jean-Charles Augereau, and Christophe Pinte

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel photometry to analyze the evolution and dissipation of circumstellar disks around Weak-Line T Tauri stars, identifying new disks and characterizing their properties across different evolutionary stages.
Contribution
It provides new Herschel observations of WTTS candidates, detecting previously unknown disks and offering insights into disk evolution from primordial to debris stages.
Findings
15 disks detected, including 2 new discoveries
Evidence of both primordial and debris disks among WTTS
Constraints on non-detections and disk dissipation timescales
Abstract
As part of the "Dust, Ice, and Gas In Time (DIGIT)" Herschel Open Time Key Program, we present Herschel photometry (at 70, 160, 250, 350 and 500 micron) of 31 Weak-Line T Tauri star (WTTS) candidates in order to investigate the evolutionary status of their circumstellar disks. Thirteen stars in our sample had circumstellar disks previously known from infrared observations at shorter wavelengths, while eighteen of them had no previous evidence for a disk. We detect a total of 15 disks as all previously known disks are detected at one or more Herschel wavelengths and two additional disks are identified for the first time. The spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of our targets seem to trace the dissipation of the primordial disk and the transition to the debris disk regime. Seven of the 15 disks appear to be optically thick primordial disks, including two objects with SEDs…
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