260 likes | 269 Views
Maurice Leutenegger With David Cohen, Steve Kahn, Stan Owocki, and Frits Paerels. Resonance scattering in the X-ray emission line profiles of ζ Pup. Resonance scattering in the X-ray emission line profiles of ζ Pup. X-ray emission from O star winds
E N D
Maurice Leutenegger With David Cohen, Steve Kahn, Stan Owocki, and Frits Paerels Resonance scattering in the X-ray emission line profiles of ζ Pup
Resonance scattering in the X-ray emission line profiles of ζ Pup • X-ray emission from O star winds • X-ray line profiles: summary of theory and observation • Data suggesting resonance scattering • Profile formation with resonance scattering • Application of RS profile model to data • Implications
X-ray emission from O stars • The driving force in radiative lines is unstable • Tenuous streams undergo runaway acceleration before colliding with dense clumps, resulting in reverse shocks Snapshot from simulation of Feldmeier (1995)
X-ray Doppler profiles(Owocki & Cohen 2001) • Wind modeled as a two-component fluid • Cool bulk of wind (absorbs X-rays) • Small fraction is heated in shocks (emits X-rays)
Parameter dependence • Two parameters influence radial distribution of X-ray emitting plasma: • “Turn-on” radius (expected to be ~ 1.5 stellar radii) • Filling factor (power law in radius)
Parameter dependence • The cool part of the wind absorbs X-rays as they leave the wind • Characteristic continuum optical depth:
Qualitative summary of model profile behavior: • Degree of blueshift measures characteristic continuum optical depth to X-rays • Width measures the onset radius of X-ray emission
Possible explanations for X-ray profile shapes (more than one may apply) • Mass loss rates too high – characteristic optical depths really are low • Porosity reduces macroscopic effective optical depth • Resonance scattering causes emission to be intrinsically shifted towards line center
Resonance scattering (Ignace et al 2002, Leutenegger et al 2007) • For an optically thick resonance line in a moving stellar atmosphere (Sobolev theory): • radial photon escape is due to the radial velocity gradient (dv/dr) • lateral photon escape is due to the spherical divergence of the wind (v/r) • Far out in the wind dv/dr goes to zero, so lateral escape is favored • If the observed X-ray emission comes from far out in the wind, the profiles are more symmetric
Angular dependence of normalized escape probability (optically thick)
Including resonance scattering in N VI leads to much better fit
Including resonance scattering in N VI leads to much better fit
What about other lines? • We can only infer the importance of RS by comparing two lines from the same ion – one must be a resonance line, and the other must not • But if RS is important in N VI and O VII, it should be important for other strong resonance lines as well!
If resonance scattering is important how do we measure anything? • Problem: profile shape is roughly degenerate for high continuum optical depth with resonance scattering and low continuum optical depth without resonance scattering • Use non-resonance lines • Even some resonance lines will not be optically thick • (Make predictions for line optical depth)
Summary • Different profile shapes in resonance and intercombination lines from the same ion can only be explained by resonance scattering • Resonance scattering can explain at least some of the unexpected lack of asymmetry in other profiles • Either porosity or reductions in mass-loss rates (relative to density-squared diagnostics) are still likely to be important in addition to RS