Characterizing the Extended Molecular Hydrogen Winds in Protoplanetary Disks from the JWST Disk Infrared Spectroscopic Chemistry Survey
Mayank Narang, Klaus M. Pontoppidan, Colette Salyk, Nicole Arulanantham, Geoffrey A. Blake, Andrea Banzatti, Joan Najita, Ilaria Pascucci, Jane Huang, Sebastiaan Krijt, Karin Oberg, Giovanni Rosotti, Till Kaeufer, Emma Dahl, L. Ilsedore Cleeves, Ke Zhang, Joel Green

TL;DR
This study uses JWST infrared spectroscopy to analyze extended molecular hydrogen winds in 34 protoplanetary disks, revealing common wind features, their properties, and implications for disk dispersal timescales.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of H₂ disk winds in protoplanetary disks using JWST data, characterizing morphology, kinematics, and mass-loss rates.
Findings
Extended H₂ emission is common in protoplanetary disks.
Disk winds are consistent with slow MHD-driven outflows.
Typical wind mass-loss rate suggests disk dispersal in 2-3 million years.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive analysis of extended H emission from 34 protoplanetary disks observed with the JWST Disk Infrared Spectroscopic Chemistry Survey (JDISCS), supplemented by archival data. We investigated the morphology, kinematics, excitation conditions, and mass dynamics of H. Extended emission from pure rotational H lines is found to be common, with 16 sources exhibiting clear signatures of disk winds. These include monopolar and bipolar structures in inclined disks and ring-like or bubble-like morphologies in face-on systems features indicative of wide-angle disk winds. Our analysis shows that the H is consistent with slow {(4.2 km s)} MHD driven winds. For ten disks, we model the wind morphology and find a median half-opening angle of and a characteristic power-law index of 1.6. Excitation analysis…
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