Deep HST/STIS Visible-Light Imaging of Debris Systems around Solar Analog Hosts
Glenn Schneider, Carol A. Grady, Christopher C. Stark, Andras Gaspar,, Joseph Carson, John H. Debes, Thomas Henning, Dean C. Hines, Hannah, Jang-Condell, Marc J. Kuchner, Marshall Perrin, Timothy J. Rodigas, Motohide, Tamura, John P. Wisniewski

TL;DR
This study uses deep Hubble Space Telescope imaging to analyze the structure and properties of debris systems around solar analog stars, revealing their morphology, brightness decay over time, and scattering characteristics.
Contribution
It provides high-fidelity visible-light images of debris disks around solar-like stars, expanding understanding of their evolution and scattering properties compared to previous observations.
Findings
Debris disk brightness decreases with age as t^-0.8.
Significant diversity in scattering phase asymmetries among disks.
Detected large, diffuse debris rings with low surface brightness.
Abstract
We present new Hubble Space Telescope observations of three a priori known starlight-scattering circumstellar debris systems (CDSs) viewed at intermediate inclinations around nearby close-solar analog stars: HD 207129, HD 202628, and HD 202917. Each of these CDSs possesses ring-like components that are more-massive analogs of our solar system's Edgeworth- Kuiper belt. These systems were chosen for follow-up observations to provide higher-fidelity and better sensitivity imaging for the sparse sample of solar-analog CDSs that range over two decades in systemic ages with HD 202628 and HD 202917 (both ~ 2.3 Gyr) currently the oldest CDSs imaged in visible or near-IR light. These deep (10 - 14 ksec) observations, with six-roll point-spread-function template subtracted visible-light coronagraphy using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, were designed to better reveal their angularly…
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