4,784 research outputs found
Modeling the RXTE light curve of Carinae from a 3-D SPH simulation of its binary wind collision
The very massive star system Carinae exhibits regular 5.54-year
(2024-day) period disruptive events in wavebands ranging from the radio to
X-ray. There is a growing consensus that these events likely stem from
periastron passage of an (as yet) unseen companion in a highly eccentric
() orbit. This paper presents three-dimensional (3-D)
Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations of the orbital variation of
the binary wind-wind collision, and applies these to modeling the X-ray light
curve observed by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). By providing a global
3-D model of the phase variation of the density of the interacting winds, the
simulations allow computation of the associated variation in X-ray absorption,
presumed here to originate from near the apex of the wind-wind interaction
cone. We find that the observed RXTE light curve can be readily fit if the
observer's line of sight is within this cone along the general direction of
apastron. Specifically, the data are well fit by an assumed inclination for the orbit's polar axis, which is thus consistent with orbital
angular momentum being along the inferred polar axis of the Homunculus nebula.
The fits also constrain the position angle that an orbital-plane
projection makes with the apastron side of the semi-major axis, strongly
excluding positions along or to the retrograde side of the
axis, with the best fit position given by . Overall the
results demonstrate the utility of a fully 3-D dynamical model for constraining
the geometric and physical properties of this complex colliding-wind binary
system.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted to MNRAS Letter
I Found You In The Shadows
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/4784/thumbnail.jp
Detection of the compressed primary stellar wind in eta Carinae
A series of three HST/STIS spectroscopic mappings, spaced approximately one
year apart, reveal three partial arcs in [Fe II] and [Ni II] emissions moving
outward from eta Carinae. We identify these arcs with the shell-like
structures, seen in the 3D hydrodynamical simulations, formed by compression of
the primary wind by the secondary wind during periastron passages.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter
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