Can near-to-mid Infrared Spectral Energy Distribution Quantitatively Trace Protoplanetary Disk Evolution?
Keywords: protoplanetary disks, infrared: stars, stars: formation, stars: pre-main sequence, stars: protostars
Abstract
Infrared (IR) spectral energy distribution (SED) is the major tracer of protoplanetary disks. It was recently proposed to use the near-to-mid IR (or K-24) SED slope α defined between 2 and 24μm as a potential quantitative tracer of disk age. We critically examine the viability of this idea and confront it with additional statistics of IR luminosities and SED shapes. We point out that, because the statistical properties of most of the complicated physical factors involved in disk evolution are still poorly understood in a quantitative sense, the only viable way is to assume them to be random so that an idealized âaverage diskâ can be defined, which allows the α histogram to trace its age. We confirm that the statistics of the zeroth order (luminosity), first order (slope α), and second order characteristics (concavity) of the observed K-24 SEDs indeed carry useful information upon the evolutionary processes of the âaverage diskâ. We also stress that intrinsic diversities in K-24 SED shapes and luminosities are always large at the level of individual stars so that the application of the evolutionary path of the âaverage diskâ to individual stars must be done with care. The data of most curves in plots are provided on GitHub (Disk-age package https://github.com/starage/disk-age/).
Más información
| Título según WOS: | Can near-to-mid Infrared Spectral Energy Distribution Quantitatively Trace Protoplanetary Disk Evolution? |
| Título de la Revista: | Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics |
| Volumen: | 24 |
| Número: | 7 |
| Editorial: | Institute of Physics |
| Fecha de publicación: | 2024 |
| Idioma: | English |
| DOI: |
10.1088/1674-4527/ad4b5c |
| Notas: | ISI |