A High-resolution Optical Survey of Upper Sco: Evidence for Coevolution of Accretion and Disk Winds

Abstract

Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) and photoevaporative winds are thought to play an important role in the evolution and dispersal of planet-forming disks. Here, we analyze high-resolution ( v 7 kms-1) optical spectra from a sample of 115 T Tauri stars in the 5-10 Myr Upper Sco association and focus on the [O I]λ6300 and Hα lines to trace disk winds and accretion, respectively. Our sample covers a large range in spectral type and we divide it into Warm (G0-M3) and Cool (later than M3) to facilitate comparison with younger regions. We detect the [O I]λ6300 line in 45 out of 87 upper sco sources with protoplanetary disks and 32 out of 45 are accreting based on Hα profiles and equivalent widths. All [O I] λ6300 Upper Sco profiles have a low-velocity (centroid < -30 kms-1, LVC) emission and most (36/45) can be fit by a single Gaussian (SC). The SC distribution of centroid velocities and FWHMs is consistent with MHD disk winds. We also find that the Upper Sco sample follows the same accretion luminosity-LVC [O I]λ6300 luminosity relation and the same anti-correlation between SC FWHM and WISE W3-W4 spectral index as the younger samples. These results indicate that accretion and disk winds coevolve and that, as inner disks clear out, wind emission arises further away from the star. Finally, our large spectral range coverage reveals that Cool stars have larger FWHMs normalized by stellar mass than Warm stars indicating that [O I]λ6300 emission arises closer in towards lower mass/lower luminosity stars.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…