60 research outputs found
Luminous Blue Variables & Mass Loss near the Eddington Limit
During the course of their evolution, massive stars lose a substantial
fraction of their initial mass, both through steady winds and through
relatively brief eruptions during their Luminous Blue Variable (LBV) phase.
This talk reviews the dynamical driving of this mass loss, contrasting the
line-driving of steady winds to the potential role of continuum driving for
eruptions during LBV episodes when the star exceeds the Eddington limit. A key
theme is to emphasize the inherent limits that self-shadowing places on
line-driven mass loss rates, whereas continuum driving can in principle drive
mass up to the "photon-tiring" limit, for which the energy to lift the wind
becomes equal to the stellar luminosity. We review how the "porosity" of a
highly clumped atmosphere can regulate continuum-driven mass loss, but also
discuss recent time-dependent simulations of how base mass flux that exceeds
the tiring limit can lead to flow stagnation and a complex, time-dependent
combination of inflow and outflow regions. A general result is thus that
porosity-mediated continuum driving in super-Eddington phases can explain the
large, near tiring-limit mass loss inferred for LBV giant eruptions.Comment: Conference proceedings, Massive Stars as Cosmic Engines, IAU Symp
250, ed. F. Bresolin, P. A. Crowther, & J. Puls (Cambridge Univ. Press
Modeling TeV gamma-rays from LS 5039: An active OB star at the extreme
Perhaps the most extreme examples of "Active OB stars" are the subset of
high-mass X-ray binaries -- consisting of an OB star plus compact companion --
that have recently been observed by Fermi and ground-based Cerenkov telescopes
like HESS to be sources of very high energy (VHE; up to 30 TeV) gamma-rays.
This paper focuses on the prominent gamma-ray source, LS5039, which consists of
a massive O6.5V star in a 3.9-day-period, mildly elliptical (e = 0.24) orbit
with its companion, assumed here to be a black-hole or unmagnetized neutron
star. Using 3-D SPH simulations of the Bondi-Hoyle accretion of the O-star wind
onto the companion, we find that the orbital phase variation of the accretion
follows very closely the simple Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton (BHL) rate for the local
radius and wind speed. Moreover, a simple model, wherein intrinsic emission of
gamma-rays is assumed to track this accretion rate, reproduces quite well Fermi
observations of the phase variation of gamma-rays in the energy range 0.1-10
GeV. However for the VHE (0.1-30 TeV) radiation observed by the HESS Cerenkov
telescope, it is important to account also for photon-photon interactions
between the gamma-rays and the stellar optical/UV radiation, which effectively
attenuates much of the strong emission near periastron. When this is included,
we find that this simple BHL accretion model also quite naturally fits the HESS
light curve, thus making it a strong alternative to the pulsar-wind-shock
models commonly invoked to explain such VHE gamma-ray emission in massive-star
binaries.Comment: To appear in "Active OB Stars: Structure, Evolution, Mass Loss &
Critical Limits", Proceedings of IAUS 272, held July 2010 in Paris, France. 7
pages; 3 figures. This version 2 corrects an alignment error in figure
Magnetically confined wind shock
Many stars across all classes possess strong enough magnetic fields to
influence dynamical flow of material off the stellar surface. For the case of
massive stars (O and B types), about 10\% of them harbour strong, globally
ordered (mostly dipolar) magnetic fields. The trapping and channeling of their
stellar winds in closed magnetic loops leads to {\it magnetically confined wind
shocks} (MCWS), with pre-shock flow speeds that are some fraction of the wind
terminal speed that can be a few thousand km s. 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\ and \ch, as well as fully self-consistent MHD
modelling and the identification of shock retreat effects in weak winds. In
addition, these objects are often sources of H emission which is
controlled by either sufficiently high mass loss rate or centrifugal breakout.
Here we review the theoretical aspects of such magnetic massive star wind
dynamics.Comment: Accepted for publication invited chapter of the Handbook of X-ray and
Gamma-ray Astrophysics published by Nature Springer. arXiv admin note: text
overlap with arXiv:1509.06482, arXiv:1605.0497
Radiation Hydrodynamics of Line-Driven Winds
Dimtri Mihalas' textbooks in the 70's and 80's on "Stellar Atmospheres" and
"Foundations of Radiation Hydrodynamics" helped lay the early groundwork for
understanding the moving atmospheres and winds of massive, luminous stars.
Indeed, the central role of the momentum of stellar radiation in driving the
mass outflow makes such massive-star winds key prototypes for radiation
hydrodynamical processes. This paper reviews the dynamics of such radiative
driving, building first upon the standard CAK model, and then discussing
subtleties associated with the development and saturation of instabilities, and
wind initiation near the sonic point base. An overall goal is to illuminate the
rich physics of radiative driving and the challenges that lie ahead in
developing dynamical models that can explain the broad scaling of mass loss
rate and flow speed with stellar properties, as well as the often complex
structure and variability observed in massive-star outflows.Comment: 14 pages. to appear in "Recent Directions in Astrophysical
Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiation Hydrodynamics
Mass and angular momentum loss of fast rotating stars via decretion disks
The spinup of massive stars induced by evolution of the stellar interior can bring the star to near-critical rotation. In critically rotating stars the decrease of the stellar moment of inertia must be balanced by a net loss of angular momentum through an equatorial decretion disk. We examine the nature and role of mass loss via such disks. In contrast to the usual stellar wind mass loss set by exterior driving from the stellar luminosity, such decretion-disk mass loss stems from the angular momentum loss needed to keep the star near and below critical rotation, given the interior evolution and decline in the star's moment of inertia. Because the specific angular momentum in a Keplerian disk increases with the square root of the radius, the decretion mass loss associated with a required level of angular momentum loss critically depends on the outer radius for viscous coupling of the disk, and can be significantly less than the spherical, wind-like mass loss commonly assumed in evolutionary calculation
Modeling Gamma-Ray emission from the high-mass X-ray binary LS 5039
A few high-mass X-ray binaries-consisting of an OB star plus compact companion- have been observed by Fermi and ground-based Cerenkov telescopes like High Energy Stereoscopic System (HESS) to be sources of very high energy (VHE; up to 30 TeV) γ-rays. This paper focuses on the prominent γ-ray source, LS 5039, which consists of a massive O6.5V star in a 3.9-day-period, mildly elliptical (e ≈ 0.24) orbit with its companion, assumed here to be an unmagnetized compact object (e.g., black hole). Using three dimensional smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations of the Bondi-Hoyle accretion of the O-star wind onto the companion, we find that the orbital phase variation of the accretion follows very closely the simple Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton (BHL) rate for the local radius and wind speed. Moreover, a simple model, wherein intrinsic emission of γ-rays is assumed to track this accretion rate, reproduces quite well Fermi observations of the phase variation of γ-rays in the energy range 0.1-10 GeV. However for the VHE (0.1-30 TeV) radiation observed by the HESS Cerenkov telescope, it is important to account also for photon-photon interactions between the γ-rays and the stellar optical/UV radiation, which effectively attenuates much of the strong emission near periastron. When this is included, we find that this simple BHL accretion model also quite naturally fits the HESS light curve, thus making it a strong alternative to the pulsar-wind-shock models commonly invoked to explain such VHE γ-ray emission in massive-star binaries.Facultad de Ciencias Astronómicas y Geofísica
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