ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Despite being $>10$Myr, there are $sim$10 debris discs with as much CO gas as in protoplanetary discs. Such discs have been assumed to be hybrid, i.e., with secondary dust but primordial gas. Here we show that both the dust and gas in such systems could instead be secondary, with the high CO content caused by accumulation of neutral carbon (C$^0$) that shields CO from photodissociating; i.e., these could be shielded secondary discs. New ALMA observations are presented of HD131835 that detect $sim 3 times 10^{-3}$ M$_oplus$ of C$^0$, the majority 40-200au from the star, in sufficient quantity to shield the previously detected CO. A simple semi-analytic model for the evolution of CO, C and O originating in a volatile-rich planetesimal belt shows how CO shielding becomes important when the viscous evolution is slow (low $alpha$ parameter) and/or the CO production rate is high. Shielding by C$^0$ may also cause the CO content to reach levels at which CO self-shields, and the gas disc may become massive enough to affect the dust evolution. Application to the HD 131835 observations shows these can be explained if $alpha sim 10^{-3}$; an inner cavity in C$^0$ and CO may also mean the system has yet to reach steady state. Application to other debris discs with high CO content finds general agreement for $alpha=10^{-3}$ to $0.1$. The shielded secondary nature of these gas discs can be tested by searching for C$^0$, as well as CN, N$_2$ and CH$^{+}$, which are also expected to be shielded by C$^0$.
Recent observations of protoplanetary discs reveal disc substructures potentially caused by embedded planets. We investigate how the gas surface density in discs changes the observed morphology in scattered light and dust continuum emission. Assuming
We have conducted a search for optical circumstellar absorption lines in the spectra of 16 debris disc host stars. None of the stars in our sample showed signs of emission line activity in either H$_{alpha}$, Ca II or Na I, confirming their more evol
We study the three-dimensional evolution of a viscous protoplanetary disc which accretes gas material from a second protoplanetary disc during a close encounter in an embedded star cluster. The aim is to investigate the capability of the mass accreti
This paper uses observations of dusty debris discs, including a growing number of gas detections in these systems, to test our understanding of the origin and evolution of this gaseous component. It is assumed that all debris discs with icy planetesi
This proceeding summarises a talk given on the state-of-the-art of debris disc modelling. We first review the basics of debris disc physics, which is followed by a short overview of the state-of-the-art in terms of modelling dust and gas in debris disc systems.