Our understanding of protoplanetary disks has greatly improved over the last
decade due to a wealth of data from new facilities. Unbiased dust surveys with
Spitzer leave us with good constraints on the dust dispersal timescale of small
grains in the terrestrial planet forming region. In the ALMA era, this can be
confronted for the first time also with evolutionary timescales of mm grains in
the outer disk. Gas surveys in the context of the existing multi-wavelength
dust surveys will be a key in large statistical studies of disk gas evolution.
Unbiased gas surveys are limited to ALMA CO submm surveys, where the
quantitative interpretation is still debated. Herschel gas surveys have been
largely biased, but [OI] 63 mic surveys and also accretion tracers agree
qualitatively with the evolutionary timescale of small grains in the inner
disk. Recent advances achieved by means of consistent multi-wavelength studies
of gas AND dust in planet forming disks reveal the subtleties of the
quantitative interpretation of gas surveys. Observational methods to determine
disk masses e.g. from CO submm lines require the knowledge of the dust
properties in the disk. Understanding not only the gas evolution, but also its
chemical composition will provide crucial input for planet formation models.
Kinetic chemical results give profoundly different answers than thermodynamic
equilibrium in terms of the C/O ratios as well as the water ice/rock ratios.
Again, dust has a key impact on the chemical evolution and composition of the
gas. Grain growth for example affects freeze-out processes and strongly
increases the cosmic ray induced UV field.Comment: appears in the proceedings of the conference "The Cosmic Wheel and
the Legacy of the AKARI archive: from galaxies and stars to planets and
life", October 17-20, 2017, Tokyo, Japa