Cold Debris Disks as Strategic Targets for the 2020s
Abstrak
Cold debris disks (T$<$200 K) are analogues to the dust in the Solar System's Kuiper belt--dust generated from the evaporation and collision of minor bodies perturbed by planets, our Sun, and the local interstellar medium. Scattered light from debris disks acts as both a signpost for unseen planets as well as a source of contamination for directly imaging terrestrial planets, but many details of these disks are poorly understood. We lay out a critical observational path for the study of nearby debris disks that focuses on defining an empirical relationship between scattered light and thermal emission from a disk, probing the dynamics and properties of debris disks, and directly determining the influence of planets on disks. We endorse the findings and recommendations published in the National Academy reports on Exoplanet Science Strategy and Astrobiology Strategy for the Search for Life in the Universe. This white paper extends and complements the material presented therein with a focus on debris disks around nearby stars. Separate complementary papers are being submitted regarding the inner warm regions of debris disks (Mennesson et al.), the modeling of debris disk evolution (Gaspar et al.), studies of dust properties (Chen et al.), and thermal emission from disks (Su et al.).
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (22)
John Debes
Elodie Choquet
Virginie C. Faramaz
Gaspard Duchene
Dean Hines
Chris Stark
Marie Ygouf
Julien Girard
Amaya Moro-Martin
Pauline Arriaga
Christine Chen
Thayne Currie
Sally Dodson-Robinson
Ewan S. Douglas
Paul Kalas
Carey M. Lisse
Dimitri Mawet
Johan Mazoyer
Bertrand Mennesson
Max A. Millar-Blanchaer
Anand Sivramakrishnan
Jason Wang
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2019
- Bahasa
- en
- Sumber Database
- arXiv
- Akses
- Open Access ✓