Title: Dusty%20Circumstellar%20Disks:%20From%20IRAS%20to%20Spitzer
1Dusty Circumstellar Disks From IRAS to Spitzer
- Collaborators
- Joseph Rhee, Inseok Song (Gemini Observatory),
- Michael McElwain, Eric Becklin (UCLA)
- Alycia Weinberger (Carnegie Institution)
2Why should one care about dusty debris disks?
- In 1983 when IRAS first discovered dust particles
orbiting Vega and many other main sequence stars,
it was not clear whether these Vega-like stars
were signposts for planetary systems or, rather,
signified failed planetary systems. Now, it is
evident that these dusty disks are associated
with planets.
3Solar system time scales and ages of young nearby
stars
- Formation of Jupiter lt 10 Myr
- Formation of Earths core 30 Myr
- Era of heavy bombardment in inner solar system
600 Myr - ? Cha cluster 8 Myr
- TW Hydrae Assoc. 8 Myr
- ? Pictoris moving group 12 Myr
- Tucana/Horologium Assoc. 30 Myr
- AB Dor moving group 70 Myr
4Debris disk discoveries in the far-infrared
IRAS, ISO, Spitzer
- IRAS was an all-sky survey and was first. ISO
and Spitzer that followed are pointed telescopes.
In addition, it appears that the frequency of
disks does not rise rapidly with decreasing dust
mass. Thus, not withstanding their superior
sensitivity, ISO did not and, so far, Spitzer has
not added very many newly detected debris disks
to those found by IRAS. New dusty systems found - IRAS 170 ISO 22 Spitzer few dozen
5Disk Imaging
- Thermal emission at submillimeter wavelengths
(with SCUBA at JCMT) - and at mid-Infrared wavelengths (e.g. with
Keck). - Reflected light at visual and near-IR wavelengths
with HST (ACS NICMOS) and with AO on large
telescopes (Keck, VLT, Gemini).
6HST ACS planet search
HST Fomalhaut detection -- consistent with sub-mm
maps
Hubble Space Telescope
JCMT SCUBA 450 micron map (Wyatt Dent 2002)
7HST ACS planet search
Fomalhaut
- Semi-major axis a 140.7 1.8 AU
- Semi-minor axis b 57.5 0.7 AU
- PA major axis 156.00.3
- Inclination i 65.9 0.4
- Projected Offset 13.4 1 AU
- PA of offset 156.0 0.3
- Deprojected Offset f 15.3 AU
- Eccentricity e f / a 0.11
Kalas, Graham Clampin 2005, Nature, Vol. 435,
pp. 1067
F814W 80 min., 17 May, 02 Aug, 27 Oct,
2004 F606W 45 min., 27 Oct. 2004 25 mas / pix,
FWHM 60 mas 0.5 AU
No inner clumps
orbital period at 140 AU 1200 yr
8AU Mic
From HST GO/10228 Kalas PI (in prep)
9HR 4796A
Schneider et al 1999
1018 Micron Image of HR 4796
11(No Transcript)
12TW Hya
Weinberger at al 2002
13HD 181327
b Pic Group Member (Schneider et al 2006,
submitted to ApJ)
14(No Transcript)
15Finding new dusty systems
- Establishing evolutionary sequences requires
large/clean samples of dusty systems of various
ages, spectral types, association with binary
systems where the secondary might be of stellar
or planetary mass or both, etc. - IRAS surveys for new dusty disks have been
plagued by limited search spaces (stellar
catalogs), false positives, poor knowledge of
stellar ages, etc.
16History/Motivation
- Over 900 IR excess stars claimed in literature
since 1983 (ROE debris disk database). - gt 50 false positives due to mis-identification
(galaxy contamination, IS cirrus, etc.) - - HD 43954 (MB 1998)
- Need for a clean list of bona fide IR excess
stars - IRAS being the only IR all sky survey for next 4
yrs until Astro-F
HD 43954
Nearby galaxy
17Search Methods
- MS stars (68054) from Hipparcos Catalog
- Sp type B6 (B-V gt -0.15)
- Distance 120 pc
- Hip MS X IRAS(60?m detection)
- FSC 481, r 45
- PSC(b gt 10º) 65, r 45
- Visual Check using GAIA
- Mis-identification
- Contamination (galaxies, ISM cirrus, etc.)
- SED Check
- Binary
- Pre-main sequence
18Bona Fide IR Excess Stars
- 170 IRAS Identified Hipparcos dwarfs
- 40 new candidates
- Tstar, Tdust, ?, ?
- Age estimate
- Zuckerman Song (2004)
19(No Transcript)
20Solar system time scales and ages of young nearby
stars
- Formation of Jupiter lt 10 Myr
- Formation of Earths core 30 Myr
- Era of heavy bombardment in inner solar system
600 Myr - ? Cha cluster 8 Myr
- TW Hydrae Assoc. 8 Myr
- ? Pictoris moving group 12 Myr
- Tucana/Horologium Assoc. 30 Myr
- AB Dor moving group 70 Myr
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23The age of dusty, nearby, G-type star HD207129?
- HD207129 is a good example of how uncertain
stellar age estimates can be. In their ISO study
of the evolution of dust abundances around
main-sequence stars, Habings group estimated
that HD207129 is older than the Sun, while
Zuckerman Webb estimated an age of only 40 Myr!
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26 Mv
B-V
27(No Transcript)
28Galactic Space Motions
- Group Name U V W
(km/s) - TW Hydrae -11 -18 -5
- Tucana/Hor -11 -21 0
- ? Pictoris -11 -16 -9
- AB Doradus -8 -27 -14
- ? Cha -12 -19 -10
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31Disk Mass and Semi-major axis (as a function of
time)
- Probably the most interesting macroscopic
properties of the dusty debris disks are their
masses (M) and dimensions (semi-major axis R). - M r N 4p a3 /3
- t N p a2 / 4p R2 ( LIR/Lbol)
- t / M 1/ r a R2
32How good a proxy for disk mass is the more easily
measured quantity tau?
- For a variety of reasons, total disk mass is best
measured at submillimeter wavelengths. But tau,
which is a measure of far-IR excess emission, is
much easier to measure and has been determined
for an order of magnitude more stars than has
dust mass.
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35(No Transcript)
36Kuiper Belt vs asteroid belt
- The dust at almost all Vega-like stars is
sufficiently cold to be orbiting with semi-major
axes of 50 AU or more from the central star.
Thus, the debris disks are almost always to be
considered (young) analogs of the Suns Kuiper
Belt. - Until the past year, among the 100 main sequence
stars with far-IR excess, only one example of
warm dust signifying a potential asteroid belt
analog had been reliably established at the
A-type star zeta Lep, of age a few 100 Myr (Jura
Chen). Tau 10-4 - Absence of warm dust is true even for stars with
ages as young as tens of Myr. Thus, dust in the
terrestrial region dissipates very quickly.
37In the past year, three more stars with warm dust
in the terrestrial region have been identified
- With Spitzer, Beichman et al 2005 found an 2 Gyr
old K-type star (HD 69830) with tau 10-4 and
silicate emission features seen in the wavelength
range accessible to IRS. (Note excess emission
at 25 micron was marginally detected by IRAS!) - From old IRAS data, we identified two solar-mass,
adolescent stars -- a Pleiad and a field star
(age gtfew 100 Myr) Follow-up at Keck and at
Gemini revealed a huge tau (4) and evidence for
micron-size crystalline and amorphous silicate
particles.
38(No Transcript)
39(No Transcript)
40(No Transcript)
41Comparison of Tau in Suns zodiacal cloud and in
analogous regions at 4 stars with IR excess
emission first detected by IRAS
- Zodiacal dust 10-7
- Zeta Lep 2 x 10-4
- HD 69830 2 x 10-4
- BD20 307 0.04
- Pleiad 0.03
42Zodiacal dust properties
- In our solar system, the typical zodiacal dust
particle is 30-100 microns in size. - In HD 69830 and BD20 307, the strong silicate
emission features indicate the dust particles are
of micron size (due to a collisional cascade?). - As a result, at these stars, PR lifetimes from
lt1 AU, are only 1000 years.
43Era of heavy bombardment in early solar system
- Until 600 Myr following the formation of the
Sun, the bombardment rate in the early solar
system was sporadically heavier than at present
by factors up to 1000. - At BD20 307, which is 1,000,000 times dustier
than the present solar system, the current
bombardment rate might be incredibly large!
44Very recent collision of two planet-mass objects??
- To account for the estimated dust mass at BD20
307, one must pulverize a 300 km diameter object
(e.g., Davida, the 5th largest asteroid) into
micron-size particles. - Perhaps something analogous to the collision
postulated to explain Earths moon has occurred
within the past few 1000 years in a planetary
system at BD20 307. - BD20 307 is an excellent target for mid-IR
interferometers and, perhaps, for radial-velocity
planet searches.
45Solar System Asteroids
- Total mass 2 1024 g (0.0003 Mass of the Earth)
- Ceres is largest with half of the total mass
- Other notables include Jura 42113, three
Stooges Moe 30439, Larry 30440, Curly
30441 - Will survive Suns evolution to a white dwarf
because gt 2 AU from the Sun
46Zeta Lep Another Asteroid Belt?
- A-type main-sequence star, Teff 8500 K
- L 14 L(sun)
- LIR 1.7 10-4 L
- D 21 pc, M 2 M(sun)
- 12th closest main-sequence A-type star
- Upper limit to size of excess emitting region 6
AU - Grain temperature near 200 K
47Fluxes from Zeta Lep
48Asteroid Belt Around Zeta Lep
- Steady state Poynting-Roberston drag balanced by
dust production - LIR (dM/dt) c2
- Zeta Lep dM/dt 1010 g s-1
- Solar System zodiacal light 3 106 g s-1
- If steady state then mass of asteroids around
zeta Lep about 200 times mass of solar systems
asteroids
49(No Transcript)
50HST ACS planet search
Fomalhaut's Belt Significance to Astronomy
- Fomalhaut's belt is the closest that has been
resolved in scattered light. - Inclination 66 means that it can be studied
around its entire circumference - Belt characteristics that are consistent with
planet-mass objects orbiting Fomalhaut - 1) The belt center is offset from the stellar
center by 15 AU 1 AU, demanding apsidal
alignment by a planet, - 2) Disk edges are sharper on the inner boundary
compared to the outer boundary and consistent
with our scattered light model that simulates a
knife-edge inner boundary and dynamical models
of planet-disk interactions. - Age 200-300 Myr, this is one of the oldest
debris disk seen in scattered light. It is
probably leaving the clean-up phase and
progressing to a configuration similar to that of
our solar system. - Replace Beta Pictoris as the debris
- disk Rosetta Stone?
- Astrophysical Mirror to our
- Kuiper Belt?
51Summary
Questions
- Outer extent of the disk?
- Color? Main belt vs. inner dust?
- Width as a function of azimuth?
- Azimuthal asymmetries?
- Plausible companion properties?
- Planet at large radii?
- Exterior companion?
- Co-moving blobs?
Contact Info Kalas (at) astron.berkeley.edu Mor
e information http//www.disksite.com/ Reference
Kalas et al. 2005, Nature, Vol. 435, pp. 1067