Extra-Solar Kuiper Belt Dust Disks
Amaya Moro-Martin, Mark C. Wyatt, Renu Malhotra, David E. Trilling

TL;DR
This paper reviews the properties, structures, and evolution of debris disks around mature stars, highlighting their similarities to our Solar System's Kuiper Belt and discussing implications for planetary system development.
Contribution
It synthesizes current observations and theories on extra-solar debris disks, emphasizing their diversity, evolution, and potential to inform about planetary system history.
Findings
Debris disks show diverse structures like rings, spirals, and asymmetries.
Dust mass declines over time, with occasional spikes from collisions.
Some disks exhibit features indicating planetary perturbations.
Abstract
The dust disks observed around mature stars are evidence that plantesimals are present in these systems on spatial scales that are similar to that of the asteroids and the KBOs in the Solar System. These dust disks (a.k.a. ``debris disks'') present a wide range of sizes, morphologies and properties. It is inferred that their dust mass declines with time as the dust-producing planetesimals get depleted, and that this decline can be punctuated by large spikes that are produced as a result of individual collisional events. The lack of solid state features indicate that, generally, the dust in these disks have sizes larger than approximately 10 microns, but exceptionally, strong silicate features in some disks suggest the presence of large quantities of small grains, thought to be the result of recent collisions. Spatially resolved observations of debris disks show a diversity of structural…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
