Interpreting the extended emission around three nearby debris disc host stars
Jonathan P. Marshall, F. Kirchschlager, S. Ertel, J.-C. Augereau, G.M., Kennedy, M. Booth, S. Wolf, B. Montesinos, C. Eiroa, and B. Matthews

TL;DR
This paper presents the first far-infrared resolved images of debris discs around three nearby stars, combining multi-wavelength data and modeling to analyze their structure and properties.
Contribution
It introduces new Herschel PACS far-infrared images of three debris discs and compares three modeling approaches to characterize their parameters.
Findings
Successful spatial resolution of debris discs at far-infrared wavelengths.
Model parameters are accurately recovered at observed noise levels.
First detailed modeling of these specific debris discs.
Abstract
Cool debris discs are a relic of the planetesimal formation process around their host star, analogous to the solar system's Edgeworth-Kuiper belt. As such, they can be used as a proxy to probe the origin and formation of planetary systems like our own. The Herschel Open Time Key Programmes "DUst around NEarby Stars" (DUNES) and "Disc Emission via a Bias-free Reconnaissance in the Infrared/Submillimetre" (DEBRIS) observed many nearby, sun-like stars at far-infrared wavelengths seeking to detect and characterize the emission from their circumstellar dust. Excess emission attributable to the presence of dust was identified from around 20% of stars. Herschel's high angular resolution ( 7" FWHM at 100 m) provided the capacity for resolving debris belts around nearby stars with radial extents comparable to the solar system (50 to 100 au). As part of the DUNES and DEBRIS…
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