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Millimetre observations of Pleiades stars: a lack of solar‐analogue planetesimal discs at 100 Myr?
Author(s) -
Greaves J. S.,
Stauffer J. R.,
Collier Cameron A.,
Meyer M. R.,
Sheehan C. K. W.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
monthly notices of the royal astronomical society: letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.067
H-Index - 122
eISSN - 1745-3933
pISSN - 1745-3925
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-3933.2008.00606.x
Subject(s) - pleiades , physics , astrophysics , planetesimal , astronomy , myr , formation and evolution of the solar system , stars , solar system , planet , luminosity , biochemistry , chemistry , genome , galaxy , gene
Solar analogues approximately 100 Myr old may have dusty debris from collisions within evolving cometary belts, and such remnant discs might also be associated with earlier stellar‐spin braking. We observed at 1.2 mm wavelength a sample of 17 fast and slow rotators, mostly single K dwarfs, in the 100 Myr Pleiades cluster. No dust was detected for individual stars or the ensemble, so there are no cold massive debris discs nor any discernible relation of such distant material to stellar spin. The net limits from these data and our earlier far‐infrared results imply that the typical Pleiades G/K dwarf has a relative disc‐to‐star luminosity ≲2 × 10 −4 . Collisional evolution models have predicted greater luminosities at the 10 8 yr epoch, for debris discs evolving out of a proto‐solar nebula. This suggests that substantial primordial discs such as that of the Sun are not the norm amongst young solar analogues, or that dynamical interactions with giant planets can remove much of the comet belt by as early as 100 Myr.

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