Long hypothesized to be the origin of planetary systems, disks
around newly formed stars have been studied in detail in the last
twenty years. Most, if not all stars form surrounded by a disk, with
typical masses of 0.001–0.3 M๏ and up to several hundred
AU. Molecular emission lines show the gas to be in Keplerian
rotation, with most species (but not H2) frozen out onto dust
grains in the cold and dense disk interior. The fraction of stars
with disks decreases from > 80% at < 1 Myr to < 10% at
10 Myr. The disk “half-life" is 2–3 Myr, with the inner and outer
disks disappearing nearly simultaneously. There is a small but
distinct populations of disks with cleared-out inner regions,
so-called cold or transitional disks, explained by
photoevaporation, planet formation, or binarity. Inside the disks,
planet formation begins, with clear observational evidence for the
growth of dust grains to sizes of a few cm at least.