A New Look at T Tauri Star Forbidden Lines: MHD Driven Winds from the Inner Disk
Min Fang, Ilaria Pascucci, Suzan Edwards, Uma Gorti, Andrea Banzatti,, Mario Flock, Patrick Hartigan, Gregory J. Herczeg, Andrea K. Dupree

TL;DR
This study analyzes forbidden emission lines in T Tauri stars to characterize MHD-driven disk winds, revealing their physical properties and potential impact on disk evolution and dispersal.
Contribution
First high-resolution analysis of forbidden lines in T Tauri stars, confirming MHD winds as a significant mechanism for disk mass loss and evolution.
Findings
LVC components are blueshifted, indicating slow disk winds.
Line ratios suggest thermal excitation at 5,000-10,000 K and high electron densities.
Mass loss in jets is modest compared to accretion rates.
Abstract
Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) and photoevaporative winds are thought to play an important role in the evolution and dispersal of planet-forming disks. We report the first high-resolution (6\kms) analysis of [S II] 4068, [O I] 5577, and [O I] 6300 lines from a sample of 48 T Tauri stars. Following Simon et al. (2016), we decompose them into three kinematic components: a high-velocity component (HVC) associated with jets, and a low-velocity narrow (LVC-NC) and broad (LVC-BC) components. We confirm previous findings that many LVCs are blueshifted by more than 1.5 kms thus most likely trace a slow disk wind. We further show that the profiles of individual components are similar in the three lines. We find that most LVC-BC and NC line ratios are explained by thermally excited gas with temperatures between 5,00010,000 K and electron densities…
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