635 research outputs found
Magnetically Confined Wind Shocks in X-rays - a Review
A subset (~ 10%) of massive stars present strong, globally ordered (mostly
dipolar) magnetic fields. The trapping and channeling of their stellar winds in
closed magnetic loops leads to magnetically confined wind shocks (MCWS), with
pre-shock flow speeds that are some fraction of the wind terminal speed. These
shocks generate hot plasma, a source of X-rays. In the last decade, several
developments took place, notably the determination of the hot plasma properties
for a large sample of objects using XMM-Newton and Chandra, as well as fully
self-consistent MHD modelling and the identification of shock retreat effects
in weak winds. Despite a few exceptions, the combination of magnetic
confinement, shock retreat and rotation effects seems to be able to account for
X-ray emission in massive OB stars. Here we review these new observational and
theoretical aspects of this X-ray emission and envisage some perspectives for
the next generation of X-ray observatories.Comment: accepted for publication by Advances in Space Research (special issue
"X-ray emission from hot stars and their winds"
New findings on the prototypical Of?p stars
In recent years several in-depth investigations of the three Galactic Of?p
stars were undertaken. These multiwavelength studies revealed the peculiar
properties of these objects (in the X-rays as well as in the optical): magnetic
fields, periodic line profile variations, recurrent photometric changes.
However, many questions remain unsolved. To clarify some of the properties of
the Of?p stars, we have continued their monitoring. A new XMM observation and
two new optical datasets were obtained. Additional information for the
prototypical Of?p trio has been found. HD108 has now reached its quiescent,
minimum-emission state, for the first time in 50--60yrs. The echelle spectra of
HD148937 confirm the presence of the 7d variations in the Balmer lines and
reveal similar periodic variations (though of lower amplitudes) in the HeI5876
and HeII4686 lines, underlining its similarities with the other two
prototypical Of?p stars. The new XMM observation of HD191612 was taken at the
same phase in the line modulation cycle but at a different orbital phase as
previous data. It clearly shows that the X-ray emission of HD191612 is
modulated by the 538d period and not the orbital period of 1542d - it is thus
not of colliding-wind origin and the phenomenon responsible for the optical
changes appears also at work in the high-energy domain. There are however
problems: our MHD simulations of the wind magnetic confinement predict both a
harder X-ray flux of a much larger strength than what is observed (the modeled
DEM peaks at 30-40MK, whereas the observed one peaks at 2MK) and narrow lines
(hot gas moving with velocities of 100--200km/s, whereras the observed FWHM is
~2000km/s).Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures (2 in jpg), accepted for publication by A&
The Effect of Magnetic Field Tilt and Divergence on the Mass Flux and Flow Speed in a Line-Driven Stellar Wind
We carry out an extended analytic study of how the tilt and
faster-than-radial expansion from a magnetic field affect the mass flux and
flow speed of a line-driven stellar wind. A key motivation is to reconcile
results of numerical MHD simulations with previous analyses that had predicted
non-spherical expansion would lead to a strong speed enhancement. By including
finite-disk correction effects, a dynamically more consistent form for the
non-spherical expansion, and a moderate value of the line-driving power index
, we infer more modest speed enhancements that are in good quantitative
agreement with MHD simulations, and also are more consistent with observational
results. Our analysis also explains simulation results that show the
latitudinal variation of the surface mass flux scales with the square of the
cosine of the local tilt angle between the magnetic field and the radial
direction. Finally, we present a perturbation analysis of the effects of a
finite gas pressure on the wind mass loss rate and flow speed in both spherical
and magnetic wind models, showing that these scale with the ratio of the sound
speed to surface escape speed, , and are typically 10-20% compared
to an idealized, zero-gas-pressure model.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, for the full version of the paper go
to: http://www.bartol.udel.edu/~owocki/preprints/btiltdiv-mdotvinf.pd
An Unusual Representation of the Last Judgement in a Thirteenth Century Fresco at St. George near Kouvaras in Attica (pl. 70-93)
Μη διαθέσιμη περίληψηNo abstract (available).
The Mask Motif in the Wall Paintings of Mistra. Cultural Implications of a Classical Feature in Late Byzantine Painting (pl. 83-94)
Μη διαθέσιμη περίληψηno abstrac
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