A Spitzer Space Telescope Survey for Dusty Debris Disks in the Nearby 32 Orionis Group
Alexander J. Shvonski, Eric E. Mamajek, Jinyoung Serena Kim, Michael, R. Meyer, Mark J. Pecaut

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer observations to identify and analyze dusty debris disks around young stars in the 32 Ori Group, revealing a significant fraction with infrared excesses indicative of planet-forming material.
Contribution
First detailed infrared survey of the 32 Ori Group, quantifying debris disk occurrence and modeling disk properties at an important planet formation epoch.
Findings
29% of group members show 24 um excess emission.
Two stars exhibit 70 um excesses, indicating cold dust.
Infrared excesses are consistent with steady state disk evolution.
Abstract
We report Spitzer Space Telescope IRAC 3.6, 4.5, 5.8 and 8 um and MIPS 24 and 70 um observations of the 32 Ori Group, a recently discovered nearby stellar association situated towards northern Orion. The proximity of the group (~93 pc) has enabled a sensitive search for circumstellar dust around group members, and its age (~20 Myr) corresponds roughly to an epoch thought to be important for terrestrial planet formation in our own solar system. We quantify infrared excess emission due to circumstellar dust among group members, utilizing available optical (e.g. Hipparcos, Tycho) and near-IR (2MASS) photometry in addition to the Spitzer IR photometry. We report 4 out of the 14 objects which exhibit 24 um excess emission more than 4\sigma above the stellar photosphere (>20%) though lacking excess emission at shorter wavelengths: HD 35656 (A0Vn), HD 36338 (F4.5), RX J0520.5+0616 (K3), and HD…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
