Probing protoplanetary disk evolution in the Chamaeleon II region
M. Villenave, F. Menard, W. R. F. Dent, M. Benisty, G. van der Plas,, J. P. Williams, M. Ansdell, A. Ribas, C. Caceres, H. Canovas, L. Cieza, A., Hales, I. Kamp, C. Pinte, D. A. Principe, and M. R. Schreiber

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to compare protoplanetary disk dust masses in the Chamaeleon II region with other star-forming regions aged 1-10 million years, revealing trends in disk evolution and mass decline over time.
Contribution
First comprehensive ALMA survey of protoplanetary disks in Cha II, providing comparative analysis of disk dust masses across multiple star-forming regions.
Findings
Most disks have dust masses below 10 Earth masses.
Disk masses in Cha II differ from those in older regions like Upper Sco and Taurus.
Disk dust mass declines with age or dust evolution.
Abstract
Context. Characterizing the evolution of protoplanetary disks is necessary to improve our understanding of planet formation. Constraints on both dust and gas are needed to determine the dominant disk dissipation mechanisms. Aims. We aim to compare the disk dust masses in the Chamaeleon II (Cha II) star-forming region with other regions with ages between 1 and 10Myr. Methods. We use ALMA band 6 observations (1.3 mm) to survey 29 protoplanetary disks in Cha II. Dust mass estimates are derived from the continuum data. Results. Out of our initial sample of 29 disks, we detect 22 sources in the continuum, 10 in 12CO, 3 in 13CO, and none in C18O (J=2-1). Additionally, we detect two companion candidates in the continuum and 12CO emission. Most disk dust masses are lower than 10Mearth, assuming thermal emission from optically thin dust. We compare consistent estimations of the distributions of…
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