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IR STIG PRIMA Seminar

Infrared Science and Technology Interest Group
PRIMA: PRobe far-Infrared Mission for Astrophysics

IR STIG about IR STIG PRIMA Seminar

Location

Virtual

Dates

26 January 2026
12:00pm ET

Community

IR STIG

Type

Seminar

Debris Disks in the Far-Infrared with PRIMA

Speaker

Meredith MacGregor (Johns Hopkins University)

Abstract

More than 20% of nearby main sequence stars are surrounded by debris disks, where planetesimals, larger bodies similar to asteroids and comets in our own Solar System, are ground down through collisions.  The resulting dusty material is directly linked to any planets in the system, providing an important probe of the processes of planet formation and subsequent dynamical evolution.  Future far-Infrared (FIR) observatories like PRIMA will provide important clues to the volatile content, gas production mechanisms, and dynamical evolution of these evolved systems.  Notably, observations of the [OI] line at 63 µm and [CII] line at 158 µm can probe the C:O ratio to inform our understanding of planetary composition and formation mechanisms.  In this talk, I will highlight the range of debris disk science that will be enable by a future FIR observatory.  I will also describe the exciting the PRIMA Internship Program, an exciting student collaboration developed as part of the PRIMA Phase A study.

Please visit the P-CAST webpage https://prima.ipac.caltech.edu/page/p-cast for a link to join and to see all of our upcoming speakers! 

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Angled from the upper left corner to the lower right corner is a cone-shaped orange-red cloud known as Herbig-Haro 49/50. This feature takes up about three-fourths of the length of this angle. The upper left end of this feature has a translucent, rounded end. The conical feature widens slightly from the rounded end at the upper right down to the lower right. Along the cone there are additional rounded edges, like edges of a wave, and intricate foamy-like details, as well as a clearer view of the black background of space. In the upper left, overlapping with the rounded end of Herbig-Haro 49/50, is a background spiral galaxy with a concentrated blue center that fades outward to blend with red spiral arms. The background of space is speckled with some white stars and smaller, more numerous, fainter white galaxies throughout.