Stirring in massive, young debris discs from spatially resolved Herschel images
A. Mo\'or, \'A. K\'osp\'al, P. \'Abrah\'am, D. Apai, Z. Balog, C., Grady, Th. Henning, A. Juh\'asz, Cs. Kiss, A. V. Krivov, N. Pawellek, Gy. M., Szab\'o

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel imagery to analyze massive debris discs, finding that planetary stirring likely explains the observed disc extents better than self-stirring in several cases, highlighting the role of planets in debris disc dynamics.
Contribution
The paper provides observational evidence that planetary stirring is a significant mechanism in massive debris discs, challenging the assumption that self-stirring alone explains their properties.
Findings
Self-stirring explains 7 out of 11 discs.
In 4 discs, planetary stirring better accounts for observations.
Known giant planets may be responsible for stirring in some systems.
Abstract
A significant fraction of main-sequence stars are encircled by dusty debris discs, where the short-lived dust particles are replenished through collisions between planetesimals. Most destructive collisions occur when the orbits of smaller bodies are dynamically stirred up, either by the gravitational effect of locally formed Pluto-sized planetesimals (self-stirring scenario), or via secular perturbation caused by an inner giant planet (planetary stirring). The relative importance of these scenarios in debris systems is unknown. Here we present new Herschel Space Observatory imagery of 11 discs selected from the most massive and extended known debris systems. All discs were found to be extended at far-infrared wavelengths, five of them being resolved for the first time. We evaluated the feasibility of the self-stirring scenario by comparing the measured disc sizes with the predictions of…
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