Observational Constraints on Dust Disk Lifetimes: Implications for Planet Formation
Lynne A. Hillenbrand

TL;DR
This paper reviews observational data on young star disks, highlighting the typical dissipation timescales of 3-8 million years and discussing implications for planet formation, based on large statistical samples.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of disk lifetimes using diverse observational diagnostics, emphasizing the dispersion and uncertainties in age estimates.
Findings
Inner accretion disks dissipate by 3-8 Myr in most stars
Infrared observations reveal dust presence in terrestrial zones
Significant dispersion exists in disk lifetime estimates
Abstract
(abridged) Thus far our impressions regarding the evolutionary time scales for young circumstellar disks have been based on small number statistics. Over the past decade, however, in addition to precision study of individual star/disk systems, substantial observational effort has been invested in obtaining less detailed data on large numbers of objects in young star clusters. This has resulted in a plethora of information now enabling statistical studies of disk evolutionary diagnostics. Along an ordinate one can measure disk presence or strength through indicators such as ultraviolet/blue excess or spectroscopic emission lines tracing accretion, infrared excess tracing dust, or millimeter flux measuring mass. Along an abscissa one can track stellar age. While bulk trends in disk indicators versus age are evident, observational errors affecting both axes, combined with systematic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBotanical Research and Chemistry · Space Exploration and Technology
