An Empirical Planetesimal Belt Radius - Stellar Luminosity Relation
L. Matr\`a, S. Marino, G. M. Kennedy, M. C. Wyatt, K. I. \"Oberg and, D. J. Wilner

TL;DR
This study finds a strong correlation between planetesimal belt radius and stellar luminosity, suggesting a fundamental link between disk structures and planet formation, supported by observational data and simulations.
Contribution
It provides the first empirical relation between belt radius and stellar luminosity, incorporating effects of observational bias and collisional evolution, highlighting potential formation mechanisms.
Findings
Belt radius scales with stellar luminosity as R ∝ L^0.19.
Observed scatter in the relation is low (~17%).
Collisional evolution reduces but does not fully explain the scatter.
Abstract
Resolved observations of millimetre-sized dust, tracing larger planetesimals, have pinpointed the location of 26 Edgeworth-Kuiper belt analogs. We report that a belt's distance to its host star correlates with the star's luminosity , following with a low intrinsic scatter of 17%. Remarkably, our Edgeworth-Kuiper belt in the Solar System and the two CO snow lines imaged in protoplanetary disks lie close to this - relation, suggestive of an intrinsic relationship between protoplanetary disk structures and belt locations. To test the effect of bias on the relation, we use a Monte Carlo approach and simulate uncorrelated model populations of belts. We find that observational bias could produce the slope and intercept of the - relation, but is unable to reproduce its low scatter. We then repeat the simulation taking…
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