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Interacting Winds: Theory Overview. with thanks for web slides from: D. Folini, K. Gayley, S. Lepine, M. MacLow, J. Pittard, I. Stevens, P. Tuthill, R. Walder. Stan Owocki Bartol Research Institute University of Delaware. Overview. Hot-stars have massive, high-speed winds. These interact:
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Interacting Winds: Theory Overview with thanks for web slides from: D. Folini, K. Gayley, S. Lepine, M. MacLow, J. Pittard, I. Stevens, P. Tuthill, R. Walder Stan Owocki Bartol Research Institute University of Delaware
Overview Hot-stars have massive, high-speed winds. These interact: • Internally • Large-scale, e.g. CIRs • Small-scale, e.g., instability-generated turbulence • In high-mass binaries, e.g. WR-O • With environs: • Previous epoch outflow, e.g. slow RSG wind • ISM • SNe High-speed shocks, often unstable.
Rotational Modulation of Hot-Star Winds Radiation hydrodynamics simulation of CIRs in a hot-star wind • Monitoring campaigns of P-Cygni lines formed in hot-star winds also often show modulation at periods comparable to the stellar rotation period. • These may stem from large-scale surface structure that induces spiral wind variation analogous to solar Corotating Interaction Regions. HD64760 Monitored during IUE “Mega” Campaign
Line-Driven Instability in Wind Acceleration Region Velocity Density • Hot-star winds intrinsically unstable at small-scales l < Lsobºvth/(dv/dr) • Growth rate » g /vth »v/L # e-folds »v/vth »100 • In 1D simulations, leads to formation of multiple shocks • In multi-D, expect supersonic “compressive turbulence” t=430 ksec
WR Wind Blobs Lepine & Moffat 1999 • Infer acceleration over extended scale: bR* ~ 20-50 RO • grad ~ k L*/4p r2c • Requires radially increasing effective opacity k ~ s/m • Possible from desaturation of optically thick blobs • Yieldsk ~ s ~ r2 grad ~ constant!
Colliding Wind Binaries • Close binaries: • X-ray attenuation • Radiative forces • Inhibition • Braking • Interface instabilities • Wide binaries: • Cometary or Spiral structure • Radio Emission • Dust formation
Colliding Wind Momentum Balance Wind-radiation balance Wind-wind balance O-star radiation WR wind Symmetric or widely separated binaries Asymmetric (e.g.WR+O) close binaries
Sudden Radiative Braking • Scaling analyses suggests broad importance in close to moderately separated WR+O systems • Diagnostic potential for line-driving opacity, e.g. in V444 Cyg Scaled Momentum Ratio Scaled Separation
Dust Spiral in WR 104 Tuthill et al. 1999 IR image from Keck How does dust form?
Wind-Blown Bubbles in ISM d = V ø pc 1000 1000 4 º 4 º _ 3 3 3 M = Ωr º 0 : 1 M n r M ø ¥ Ω ( V ø ) Ø 1 m m pc 3 3 WR wind bubble NGC 2359 √ ! 1 = 3 _ M ø ° 6 5 r = pc n 1 Some key scalings: s _ M ° 6 ø = 100 yrs m 3 V n 1 1000
Formation of Prolate Nebulae W-limit Gravity darkening Frank et al. 1998: Prolate fast wind into spherical medium Langer et al. 1999: Fast spherical wind into slow, dense equatorial flow
Shock Interface Instabilities g a • Kelvin-Helmholtz (shear) • Cooling Overstabilty • Rayleigh-Taylor (heavy over light ) • Vishniac & Thin-Shell (gas-ram) (ram-ram) For summary, see J. Pittard Ph.D. thesis
2D Planar Simulation of Interaction Layer Walder & Folini 1998,1999 Isothermal case: Thin-shell instability Radiative cooling case: Cooling overstability Density
Questions Internal interactions • What induces large-scale DAC structure? NRP? B-fields? • What is lateral scale of instability structure? • What is origin of WR blobs? Instability? Pulsation? • What causes extended blob acceleration, b>>1 Wind-wind collisions • What reduces and softens X-ray emission? • Absorption? Conduction? Instability mixing? Braking? • Does Radiative Braking Occur? Even in clumped flows? • How does dust spiral form? Wind-environs • What determines nebula shape? e.g., in h Car: • What causes the axisymmetry? Magnetic fields? Rotation? Radiation? • W-limit vs. gravity darkening
Radiative Shocks µ ∂ 4 V 17 2 N = 7 £ 10 cm cool 100 km = s • Hot Gas Cools by Line-Emission • In 1D ideally develops characteristic layers
Reduction of X-ray emission 3D simulations of V444 Cygni (J. Pittard, Ph. Thesis, 1999): Instantaneous wind acceleration Radiative wind acceleration 3x1034 erg/s 8x1032 erg/s