Circumstellar disc

Circumstellar discs HD 141943 and HD 191089. The bottom images are illustrations of above real images.[1]

A circumstellar disc (or circumstellar disk) is a torus, pancake or ring-shaped accretion disk of matter composed of gas, dust, planetesimals, asteroids, or collision fragments in orbit around a star. Around the youngest stars, they are the reservoirs of material out of which planets may form. Around mature stars, they indicate that planetesimal formation has taken place, and around white dwarfs, they indicate that planetary material survived the whole of stellar evolution. Such a disc can manifest itself in various ways.

  1. ^ "Circumstellar Disks HD 141943 and HD 191089". ESA/Hubble images. Retrieved 29 April 2014.