
TL;DR
Debris disks around stars provide insights into planet formation, disk evolution, and planetesimal properties, with recent observations revealing complex structures influenced by planets and ongoing processes.
Contribution
This paper reviews recent observational and theoretical advances in understanding debris disks and their role in planet formation.
Findings
Debris disks are common around ~20% of nearby stars.
Disk structures often indicate planetary influences.
Gas persists in some debris disks, suggesting ongoing processes.
Abstract
Debris disks are the dust disks found around ~20% of nearby main sequence stars in far-IR surveys. They can be considered as descendants of protoplanetary disks or components of planetary systems, providing valuable information on circumstellar disk evolution and the outcome of planet formation. The debris disk population can be explained by the steady collisional erosion of planetesimal belts; population models constrain where (10-100au) and in what quantity (>1Mearth) planetesimals (>10km in size) typically form in protoplanetary disks. Gas is now seen long into the debris disk phase. Some of this is secondary implying planetesimals have a Solar System comet-like composition, but some systems may retain primordial gas. Ongoing planet formation processes are invoked for some debris disks, such as the continued growth of dwarf planets in an unstirred disk, or the growth of terrestrial…
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