Jump To Date
View By Semester
View By Series
Add An Event


Center for Astrophysics Research and Technologies Seminar Series Information

 

Events Calendar

Observational Constraints on the Process of Grain Growth and Evolution

Thursday September 19, 2013
2:00 pm


 Presenter:  Laura Perez (NRAO)
 Series:  Center for Astrophysics Research and Technologies Seminar Series
 Abstract:  Theory and observations suggest that the earliest stage toward planet formation in a protoplanetary disk is the growth of dust particles: from interstellar medium sub-micron-sized grains to centimeter-sized pebbles. Grain growth can be inferred by measuring the spectral energy distribution at long wavelengths, which traces the continuum dust emission spectrum and hence the dust opacity. In this talk, I will review several observational studies which indicate an evolution of the dust  component in protoplanetary disks, suggesting at least 4 orders of magnitude in particle size growth. Furthermore, thanks to now-available spatially resolved observations of circumstellar disks at multiple millimeter and centimeter wavelengths (employing for example CARMA, SMA, PdBI, or the VLA), evidence on a radial dependance of the dust opacity with radius has been obtained. I will discuss these recent observational constraints and its comparison with physical models of grain evolution, that include collisional coagulation, fragmentation, and the interaction of these grains with the gaseous disk (the radial-drift problem).
 Host:  Gregory Taylor
 Location:  PAIS-2540, PAIS

Disability Notice If you need an auxiliary aid or service to attend any Department of Physics and Astronomy event, please contact the department (phone: 505 277-2616; email: physics@unm.edu) as far in advance as possible to ensure you are accommodated.