Probing the Final Stages of Protoplanetary Disk Evolution with ALMA
A. Hardy, C. Caceres, M. R. Schreiber, L. Cieza, R. D. Alexander, H., Canovas, J. P. Williams, Z. Wahhaj

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to investigate the final stages of protoplanetary disk evolution, revealing rapid dust clearing and identifying young debris disks among weak-line T Tauri stars, thus constraining theories of disk dispersal.
Contribution
It provides observational constraints on disk-clearing processes by measuring dust and gas content in young WTTS, highlighting rapid dust dispersal and the prevalence of debris disks.
Findings
Most WTTS with infrared excess are young debris disks.
Detected continuum emission in 4 of 24 WTTS, no CO emission in any.
Rapid dust clearing occurs after accretion stops.
Abstract
The evolution of a circumstellar disk from its gas-rich protoplanetary stage to its gas-poor debris stage is not understood well. It is apparent that disk clearing progresses from the inside-out on a short time scale and models of photoevaporation are frequently used to explain this. However, the photoevaporation rates predicted by models differ by up to two orders of magnitude, resulting in uncertain time scales for the final stages of disk clearing. Photoevaporation theories predict that the final stages of disk-clearing progress in objects that have ceased accretion but still posses considerable material at radii far from the star. Weak-line T Tauri stars (WTTS) with infrared excess are likely in this configuration. We aim to provide observational constraints on theories of disk-clearing by measuring the dust masses and CO content of a sample of young (1.8-26.3 Myr) WTTS. We used…
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