19 research outputs found
The sensitivity of H alpha profiles to rapid electron beam fluctuations
In order to understand the temporal relationship between H alpha and hard X-ray emission predicted by the nonthermal electron thick target model of impulsive-phase energy transport the time-dependent theoretical H alpha profiles were computed for the dynamic model atmospheres of Fisher, Canfield, and McClymont, which simulate the effects of an impulsively initiated power-law beam of electrons. On the basis of the physical analysis it was expected that a very rapid H alpha response to an instantaneous increase in the flux of a nonthermal deka-keV electron beam, as compared to the timescale associated with the propagation of these electrons over characteristic flare coronal loop spatial scales. It was concluded that observational efforts to test the thick target nonthermal electron model through detection of impulsive H alpha brightenings associated with impulsive hard X-ray or microwave bursts should initially focus attention on the H alpha line center. Additional simultaneous blue-wing measurements will have substantial diagnostic potential
A Porosity-Length Formalism for Photon-Tiring-Limited Mass Loss from Stars Above the Eddington Limit
We examine radiatively driven mass loss from stars near and above the
Eddington limit (Ledd). We begin by reviewing the instabilities that are
expected to form extensive structure near Ledd. We investigate how this
"porosity" can reduce the effective coupling between the matter and radiation.
Introducing a new "porosity-length'' formalism, we derive a simple scaling for
the reduced effective opacity, and use this to derive an associated scaling for
the porosity-moderated, continuum-driven mass loss rate from stars that
formally exceed Ledd. For a simple super-Eddington model with a single porosity
length that is assumed to be on the order of the gravitational scale height,
the overall mass loss is similar to that derived in previous porosity work.
This is much higher than is typical of line-driven winds, but is still only a
few percent of the photon tiring limit--for which the luminosity becomes
insufficient to carry the flow out of the gravitational potential. To obtain
still stronger mass loss that approaches observationally inferred values near
this limit, we introduce a power-law-porosity model in which the associated
structure has a broad range of scales. We show that the mass loss rate can be
enhanced by a factor that increases with the Eddington parameter Gamma, such
that for moderately large Gamma (> 3-4), mass loss rates could approach the
photon tiring limit. Together with the ability to drive quite fast outflow
speeds, the derived mass loss could explain the large inferred mass loss and
flow speeds of giant outbursts in eta Carinae and other LBV stars.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Ap
Asymptotic Opening Angles for Colliding-Wind Bow Shocks: the Characteristic-Angle Approximation
By considering the advection and interaction of the vector momentum flux in
highly supersonic spherically diverging winds, we derive a simple analytic
description of the asymptotic opening angle of a wind-collision shock cone, in
the approximation that the shocked gas is contained in a cone streaming out
along a single characteristic opening angle. Both highly radiative and highly
adiabatic limits are treated, and their comparison is the novel result.
Analytic closed-form expressions are obtained for the inferred wind momentum
ratios as a function of the observed shock opening angle, allowing the
conspicuous shape of the asymptotic bow shock to be used as a preliminary
constraint on more detailed modeling of the colliding winds. In the process, we
explore from a general perspective the limitations in applying to the global
shock geometry the so-called Dyson approximation, which asserts a local balance
in the perpendicular ram pressure across the shock.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figur
Probing Wolf-Rayet Winds: Chandra/HETG X-Ray Spectra of WR 6
With a deep Chandra/HETGS exposure of WR 6, we have resolved emission lines
whose profiles show that the X-rays originate from a uniformly expanding
spherical wind of high X-ray-continuum optical depth. The presence of strong
helium-like forbidden lines places the source of X-ray emission at tens to
hundreds of stellar radii from the photosphere. Variability was present in
X-rays and simultaneous optical photometry, but neither were correlated with
the known period of the system or with each other. An enhanced abundance of
sodium revealed nuclear processed material, a quantity related to the
evolutionary state of the star. The characterization of the extent and nature
of the hot plasma in WR 6 will help to pave the way to a more fundamental
theoretical understanding of the winds and evolution of massive stars.Comment: Accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
UV Spectropolarimetry with Polstar: Massive Star Binary Colliding Winds
The winds of massive stars are important for their direct impact on the
interstellar medium, and for their influence on the final state of a star prior
to it exploding as a supernova. However, the dynamics of these winds is
understood primarily via their illumination from a single central source. The
Doppler shift seen in resonance lines is a useful tool for inferring these
dynamics, but the mapping from that Doppler shift to the radial distance from
the source is ambiguous. Binary systems can reduce this ambiguity by providing
a second light source at a known radius in the wind, seen from orbitally
modulated directions. From the nature of the collision between the winds, a
massive companion also provides unique additional information about wind
momentum fluxes. Since massive stars are strong ultraviolet (UV) sources, and
UV resonance line opacity in the wind is strong, UV instruments with a high
resolution spectroscopic capability are essential for extracting this dynamical
information. Polarimetric capability also helps to further resolve ambiguities
in aspects of the wind geometry that are not axisymmetric about the line of
sight, because of its unique access to scattering direction information. We
review how the proposed MIDEX-scale mission Polstar can use UV
spectropolarimetric observations to critically constrain the physics of
colliding winds, and hence radiatively-driven winds in general. We propose a
sample of 20 binary targets, capitalizing on this unique combination of
illumination by companion starlight, and collision with a companion wind, to
probe wind attributes over a range in wind strengths. Of particular interest is
the hypothesis that the radial distribution of the wind acceleration is altered
significantly, when the radiative transfer within the winds becomes optically
thick to resonance scattering in multiple overlapping UV lines.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures, Review in a topical collection series of
Astrophysics and Space Sciences on the proposed Polstar satellite. arXiv
admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2111.1155
The prototype colliding-wind pinwheel WR 104
Results from the most extensive study of the time-evolving dust structure
around the prototype "Pinwheel" nebula WR 104 are presented. Encompassing 11
epochs in three near-infrared filter bandpasses, a homogeneous imaging data set
spanning more than 6 years (or 10 orbits) is presented. Data were obtained from
the highly successful Keck Aperture Masking Experiment, which can recover high
fidelity images at extremely high angular resolutions, revealing the geometry
of the plume with unprecedented precision. Inferred properties for the
(unresolved) underlying binary and wind system are orbital period 241.5 +/- 0.5
days and angular outflow velocity of 0.28 +/- 0.02 mas/day. An optically thin
cavity of angular size 13.3 +/- 1.4 mas was found to lie between the central
binary and the onset of the spiral dust plume. Rotational motion of the wind
system induced by the binary orbit is found to have important ramifications:
entanglement of the winds results in strong shock activity far downstream from
the nose of the bowshock. The far greater fraction of the winds participating
in the collision may play a key role in gas compression and the nucleation of
dust at large radii from the central binary and shock stagnation point.
Investigation of the effects of radiative braking pointed towards significant
modifications of the simple hydrostatic colliding wind geometry, extending the
relevance of this phenomena to wider binary systems than previously considered.
Limits placed on the maximum allowed orbital eccentricity of e < 0.06 argue
strongly for a prehistory of tidal circularization in this system. Finally we
discuss the implications of Earth's polar (i < 16 deg) vantage point onto a
system likely to host supernova explosions at future epochs.Comment: 35 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journa
Ultraviolet spectropolarimetry: conservative and nonconservative mass transfer in OB interacting binaries
peer reviewe