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A&A 433, 1007-1012 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20042073
The insignificance of P-R drag in detectable extrasolar planetesimal belts
M. C. WyattUK Astronomy Technology Centre, Royal Observatory, Edinburgh EH9 3HJ, UK
e-mail: wyatt@roe.ac.uk
(Received 27 September 2004 / Accepted 13 December 2004 )
Abstract
This paper considers a simple model in which dust produced
in a planetesimal belt migrates in toward the star due to P-R drag
suffering destructive collisions with other dust grains on the way.
Assuming the dust is all of the same size, the resulting surface
density distribution can be derived analytically and depends only on
the parameter
;
this parameter can be determined observationally with the hypothesis
that
.
For massive belts in which
dust is confined to the
planetesimal belt, while the surface density of more tenuous belts, in
which
, is constant with distance from the star.
The emission spectrum of dust from planetesimal belts at different
distances from different mass stars shows that the dust belts
which have been detected to date should have
;
dust belts with
are hard to detect as they are
much fainter than the stellar photosphere.
This is confirmed for a sample of 37 debris disk candidates for
which
was determined to be >10.
This means that these disks are so massive that mutual collisions
prevent dust from reaching the inner regions of these systems
and P-R drag can be ignored when studying their dynamics.
Models for the formation of structure in debris disks by the trapping
of particles into planetary resonances by P-R drag should be
reconsidered.
However, since collisions do not halt 100% of the dust, this means
that in the absence of planetary companions debris disk systems should
be populated by small quantities of hot dust which may be detectable
in the mid-IR.
Even in disks with
the temperature of dust emission is
shown to be a reliable tracer of the planetesimal distribution
meaning that inner holes in the dust distribution imply a lack of
colliding planetesimals in the inner regions.
Key words: stars: circumstellar matter -- stars: planetary systems: formation
© ESO 2005
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