10 research outputs found

    Modeling X-ray Emission Line Profiles from Massive Star Winds - A Review

    Get PDF
    The Chandra and XMM-Newton X-ray telescopes have led to numerous advances in the study and understanding of astrophysical X-ray sources. Particularly important has been the much increased spectral resolution of modern X-ray instrumentation. Wind-broadened emission lines have been spectroscopically resolved for many massive stars. This contribution reviews approaches to the modeling of X-ray emission line profile shapes from single stars, including smooth winds, winds with clumping, optically thin versus thick lines, and the effect of a radius-dependent photoabsorption coefficient

    Parameter constraints for high-energy models of colliding winds of massive stars: the case WR 147

    Full text link
    We explore the ability of high energy observations to constrain orbital parameters of long period massive binary systems by means of an inverse Compton model acting in colliding wind environments. This is particular relevant for (very) long period binaries where orbital parameters are often poorly known from conventional methods, as is the case e.g. for the Wolf-Rayet (WR) star binary system WR 147 where INTEGRAL and MAGIC upper limits on the high-energy emission have recently been presented. We conduct a parameter study of the set of free quantities describing the yet vaguely constrained geometry and respective effects on the non-thermal high-energy radiation from WR 147. The results are confronted with the recently obtained high-energy observations and with sensitivities of contemporaneous high-energy instruments like Fermi-LAT. For binaries with sufficient long periods, like WR 147, gamma-ray attenuation is unlikely to cause any distinctive features in the high-energy spectrum. This leaves the anisotropic inverse Compton scattering as the only process that reacts sensitively on the line-of-sight angle with respect to the orbital plane, and therefore allows the deduction of system parameters even from observations not covering a substantial part of the orbit. Provided that particle acceleration acts sufficiently effectively to allow the production of GeV photons through inverse Compton scattering, our analysis indicates a preference for WR 147 to possess a large inclination angle. Otherwise, for low inclination angles, electron acceleration is constrained to be less efficient as anticipated here.Comment: 33 pages, 9 figures; accepted by Ap

    Probing the Rotational Velocity of Galactic WO Stars with Spectropolarimetry

    Get PDF
    Oxygen sequence Wolf-Rayet stars (WO) are thought to be the final evolution phase of some high-mass stars, as such they may be the progenitors of Type Ic SNe as well as potential progenitors of broad-lined Ic and long gamma-ray bursts. We present the first spectropolarimetric observations of the Galactic WO stars WR93b and WR102 obtained with FORS1 on the Very Large Telescope. We find no sign of a line effect, which could be expected if these stars were rapid rotators. We also place constraints on the amplitude of a potentially undetected line effect. This allows us to derive upper limits on the possible intrinsic continuum polarization and find Pcont \u3c 0.077 per cent and Pcont \u3c 0.057 per cent for WR93b and WR102, respectively. Furthermore, we derive upper limits on the rotation of our WO stars by considering our results in the context of the wind compression effect. We estimate that for an edge-on case the rotational velocity of WR93b is vrot \u3c 324 km s−1 while for WR102 vrot \u3c 234 km s−1. These correspond to values of vrot/vcrit \u3c 19 per cent and j) \u3c 18.0 cm2 s−1 for WR93b and 2 s−1 for WR102. The upper limits found on vrot/vcrit and log(j) for our WO stars are therefore similar to the estimates calculated for Galactic Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars that do show a line effect. Therefore, although the presence of a line effect in a single WR star is indicative of fast rotation, the absence of a line effect does not rule out significant rotation, even when considering the edge-on scenario

    Gamma rays from colliding winds of massive stars

    Get PDF
    Colliding winds of massive binaries have long been considered as potential sites of non-thermal high-energy photon production. This is motivated by the detection of non-thermal spectra in the radio band, as well as by correlation studies of yet unidentified EGRET gamma-ray sources with source populations appearing in star formation regions. This work re-considers the basic radiative processes and its properties that lead to high energy photon production in long-period massive star systems. We show that Klein-Nishina effects as well as the anisotropic nature of the inverse Compton scattering, the dominating leptonic emission process, likely yield spectral and variability signatures in the gamma-ray domain at or above the sensitivity of current or upcoming gamma ray instruments like GLAST-LAT. In addition to all relevant radiative losses, we include propagation (such as convection in the stellar wind) as well as photon absorption effects, which a priori can not be neglected. The calculations are applied to WR140 and WR147, and predictions for their detectability in the gamma-ray regime are provided. Physically similar specimen of their kind like WR146, WR137, WR138, WR112 and WR125 may be regarded as candidate sources at GeV energies for near-future gamma-ray experiments. Finally, we discuss several aspects relevant for eventually identifying this source class as a gamma-ray emitting population. Thereby we utilize our findings on the expected radiative behavior of typical colliding wind binaries in the gamma-ray regime as well as its expected spatial distribution on the gamma-ray sky

    X-ray Diagnostics of Massive Star Winds

    No full text
    corecore