587 research outputs found
On the Chandra X-ray Sources in the Galactic Center
Recent deep Chandra surveys of the Galactic center region have revealed the
existence of a faint, hard X-ray source population. While the nature of this
population is unknown, it is likely that several types of stellar objects
contribute. For sources involving binary systems, accreting white dwarfs and
accreting neutron stars with main sequence companions have been proposed. Among
the accreting neutron star systems, previous studies have focused on stellar
wind-fed sources. In this paper, we point out that binary systems in which mass
transfer occurs via Roche lobe overflow (RLOF) can also contribute to this
X-ray source population.
A binary population synthesis study of the Galactic center region has been
carried out, and it is found that evolutionary channels for neutron star
formation involving the accretion induced collapse of a massive ONeMg white
dwarf, in addition to the core collapse of massive stars, can contribute to
this population. The RLOF systems would appear as transients with quiescent
luminosities, above 2 keV, in the range from 10^31-10^32 ergs/s. The results
reveal that RLOF systems primarily contribute to the faint X-ray source
population in the Muno et al. (2003) survey and wind-fed systems can contribute
to the less sensitive Wang et al. (2002) survey. However, our results suggest
that accreting neutron star systems are not likely to be the major contributor
to the faint X-ray source population in the Galactic center.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 1 table ApJ in press (Dec 2004). Substantial
change
A New Version of Reimers' law of Mass Loss Based on a Physical Approach
We present a new semi-empirical relation for the mass loss of cool stellar
winds, which so far has frequently been described by "Reimers' law".
Originally, this relation was based solely on dimensional scaling arguments
without any physical interpretation. In our approach, the wind is assumed to
result from the spill-over of the extended chromosphere, possibly associated
with the action of waves, especially Alfven waves, which are used as guidance
in the derivation of the new formula. We obtain a relation akin to the original
Reimers law, but which includes two new factors. They reflect how the
chromospheric height depends on gravity and how the mechanical energy flux
depends, mainly, on effective temperature. The new relation is tested and
sensitively calibrated by modelling the blue end of the Horizontal Branch of
globular clusters. The most significant difference from mass loss rates
predicted by the Reimers relation is an increase by up to a factor of 3 for
luminous late-type (super-)giants, in good agreement with observations.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted by ApJ Letter
On the Dynamic Stability of Cool Supergiant Atmospheres
We have developed a new formalism to compute the thermodynamic coefficient
Gamma1 in the theory of stellar and atmospheric stability. We generalize the
classical derivation of the first adiabatic index, which is based on the
assumption of thermal ionization and equilibrium between gas and radiation
temperature, towards an expression which incorporates photo-ionization due to
radiation with a temperature T_rad different from the local kinetic gas
temperature.Our formalism considers the important non-LTE conditions in the
extended atmospheres of supergiant stars. An application to the Kurucz grid of
cool supergiant atmospheres demonstrates that models with T_rad =~ T_eff
between 6500 K and 7500 K become most unstable against dynamic perturbations,
according to Ledoux' stability integral . This results from Gamma1 and
acquiring very low values, below 4/3, throughout the entire stellar
atmosphere, which causes very high gas compression ratios around these
effective temperatures. Based on detailed NLTE-calculations, we discuss
atmospheric instability of pulsating massive yellow supergiants, like the
hypergiant rho Cas (Ia+), which exist in the extension of the Cepheid
instability strip, near the Eddington luminosity limit.Comment: 54 pages including figures and the Appendix, 7 figures, Accepted for
The Astrophysical Journal, Main Journal, 558, Sept. 200
Nucleosynthesis in Massive Stars With Improved Nuclear and Stellar Physics
We present the first calculations to follow the evolution of all stable
nuclei and their radioactive progenitors in stellar models computed from the
onset of central hydrogen burning through explosion as Type II supernovae.
Calculations are performed for Pop I stars of 15, 19, 20, 21, and 25 M_sun
using the most recently available experimental and theoretical nuclear data,
revised opacity tables, neutrino losses, and weak interaction rates, and taking
into account mass loss due to stellar winds. A novel ``adaptive'' reaction
network is employed with a variable number of nuclei (adjusted each time step)
ranging from about 700 on the main sequence to more than 2200 during the
explosion. The network includes, at any given time, all relevant isotopes from
hydrogen through polonium (Z=84). Even the limited grid of stellar masses
studied suggests that overall good agreement can be achieved with the solar
abundances of nuclei between 16O and 90Zr. Interesting discrepancies are seen
in the 20 M_sun model and, so far, only in that model, that are a consequence
of the merging of the oxygen, neon, and carbon shells about a day prior to core
collapse. We find that, in some stars, most of the ``p-process'' nuclei can be
produced in the convective oxygen burning shell moments prior to collapse; in
others, they are made only in the explosion. Serious deficiencies still exist
in all cases for the p-process isotopes of Ru and Mo.Comment: 53 pages, 17 color figures (3 as separate GIF images), slightly
extended discussion and references, accepted by Ap
The most massive progenitors of neutron stars: CXO J164710.2-455216
The evolution leading to the formation of a neutron star in the very young
Westerlund 1 star cluster is investigated. The turnoff mass has been estimated
to be 35 Msun, indicating a cluster age ~ 3-5 Myr. The brightest X-ray source
in the cluster, CXO J164710.2-455216, is a slowly spinning (10 s) single
neutron star and potentially a magnetar. Since this source was argued to be a
member of the cluster, the neutron star progenitor must have been very massive
(M_zams > 40 Msun) as noted by Muno et al. (2006). Since such massive stars are
generally believed to form black holes (rather than neutron stars), the
existence of this object poses a challenge for understanding massive star
evolution. We point out while single star progenitors below M_zams < 20 Msun
form neutron stars, binary evolution completely changes the progenitor mass
range. In particular, we demonstrate that mass loss in Roche lobe overflow
enables stars as massive as 50-80 Msun, under favorable conditions, to form
neutron stars. If the very high observed binary fraction of massive stars in
Westerlund 1 (> 70 percent) is considered, it is natural that CXO
J164710.2-455216 was formed in a binary which was disrupted in a supernova
explosion such that it is now found as a single neutron star. Hence, the
existence of a neutron star in a given stellar population does not necessarily
place stringent constraints on progenitor mass when binary interactions are
considered. It is concluded that the existence of a neutron star in Westerlund
1 cluster is fully consistent with the generally accepted framework of stellar
evolution.Comment: 5 pages of text and 4 figures (submitted to Astrophysical Journal
The hypergiant HR 8752 evolving through the yellow evolutionary void
Context. We study the time history of the yellow hypergiant HR 8752 based on high-resolution spectra (1973-2005), the observed MK spectral classification data, B - V- and V-observations (1918-1996) and yet earlier V-observations (1840-1918).<br>Aims. Our local thermal equilibrium analysis of the spectra yields accurate values of the effective temperature (T-eff), the acceleration of gravity (g), and the turbulent velocity (v(t)) for 26 spectra. The standard deviations average are 82 K for T-eff, 0.23 for log g, and 1.1 km s(-1) for v(t).<br>Methods. A comparison of B-V observations, MK spectral types, and T-eff-data yields E(B-V), "intrinsic" B-V, T-eff, absorption A(V), and the bolometric correction BC. With the additional information from simultaneous values of B-V, V, and an estimated value of R, the ratio of specific absorption to the interstellar absorption parameter E(B - V), the "unreddened" bolometric magnitude m(bol),(0) can be determined. With Hipparcos distance measurements of HR 8752, the absolute bolometric magnitude M-bol,M-0 can be determined.<br>Results. Over the period of our study, the value of T-eff gradually increased during a number of downward excursions that were observable over the period of sufficient time coverage. These observations, together with those of the effective acceleration g and the turbulent velocity v(t), suggest that the star underwent a number of successive gas ejections. During each ejection, a pseudo photosphere was produced of increasingly smaller g and higher v(t) values. After the dispersion into space of the ejected shells and after the restructuring of the star's atmosphere, a hotter and more compact photosphere became visible. From the B - V and V observations, the basic stellar parameters, T-eff, log M/M-circle dot, log L/L-circle dot, and log R/R-circle dot are determined for each of the observational points. The results show the variation in these basic stellar parameters over the past near-century.<br>Conclusions. We show that the atmospheric instability region in the HR-diagram that we baptize the yellow evolutionary void actually consists of two parts. We claim that the present observations show that HR 8752 is presently climbing out of the "first" instability region and that it is on its way to stability, but in the course of its future evolution it still has to go through the second potential unstable region
On the role of continuum-driven eruptions in the evolution of very massive stars and Population III stars
We suggest that the mass lost during the evolution of very massive stars may
be dominated by optically thick, continuum-driven outbursts or explosions,
instead of by steady line-driven winds. In order for a massive star to become a
WR star, it must shed its H envelope, but new estimates of the effects of
clumping in winds indicate that line driving is vastly insufficient. We discuss
massive stars above roughly 40-50 Msun, for which the best alternative is mass
loss during brief eruptions of luminous blue variables (LBVs). Our clearest
example of this phenomenon is the 19th century outburst of eta Car, when the
star shed 12-20 Msun or more in less than a decade. Other examples are
circumstellar nebulae of LBVs, extragalactic eta Car analogs (``supernova
impostors''), and massive shells around SNe and GRBs. We do not yet fully
understand what triggers LBV outbursts, but they occur nonetheless, and present
a fundamental mystery in stellar astrophysics. Since line opacity from metals
becomes too saturated, the extreme mass loss probably arises from a
continuum-driven wind or a hydrodynamic explosion, both of which are
insensitive to metallicity. As such, eruptive mass loss could have played a
pivotal role in the evolution and fate of massive metal-poor stars in the early
universe. If they occur in these Population III stars, such eruptions would
profoundly affect the chemical yield and types of remnants from early SNe and
hypernovae.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, accepted by ApJ Letter
- …