Multi-wavelength observations of planet forming disks: Constraints on planet formation processes
Inga Kamp, Stefano Antonellini, Andres Carmona, John Ilee, Christian, Rab

TL;DR
This paper reviews multi-wavelength observations of protoplanetary disks, highlighting recent advances in understanding dust and gas evolution, chemical composition, and their implications for planet formation processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of observational constraints on disk evolution and emphasizes the importance of combined dust and gas studies for planet formation models.
Findings
Dust dispersal timescales constrained by Spitzer data
ALMA and Herschel surveys reveal gas and dust evolution
Chemical composition insights from multi-wavelength observations
Abstract
Our understanding of protoplanetary disks has greatly improved over the last decade due to a wealth of data from new facilities. Unbiased dust surveys with Spitzer leave us with good constraints on the dust dispersal timescale of small grains in the terrestrial planet forming region. In the ALMA era, this can be confronted for the first time also with evolutionary timescales of mm grains in the outer disk. Gas surveys in the context of the existing multi-wavelength dust surveys will be a key in large statistical studies of disk gas evolution. Unbiased gas surveys are limited to ALMA CO submm surveys, where the quantitative interpretation is still debated. Herschel gas surveys have been largely biased, but [OI] 63 mic surveys and also accretion tracers agree qualitatively with the evolutionary timescale of small grains in the inner disk. Recent advances achieved by means of consistent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Phase Equilibria and Thermodynamics · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
