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The Peculiar Physics of Line-Driving Stan Owocki Bartol Research Institute University of Delaware Colloborators: Ken Gayley, U. Iowa Joachim Puls, U. Munich Steve Cranmer, CfA Outline: • Radiative force from free electron scattering • Resonant amplification of line-scattering • Doppler sweeping of thick lines • CAK theory for steady, spherical wind • Line-driven instability • Multi-D winds with vector line-force: • Winds from rotating stars •Wind Compressed Disks (WCDs) • WCD inhibition by nonradial line-force • Spindown of wind rotation • Colliding wind binaries • Radiative braking • Line-driven ablation • Summary Winds that Sail on Starlight Stan Owocki Bartol Research Institute University of Delaware Collaborators K. Gayley, U. Iowa J. Puls, U. Munich D. Cohen, Bartol/UDel. Outline What is a Stellar Wind? Intercepting Light's Momentum Doppler Sweeping by Spectral Lines CAK Model for Steady, Line-Driven Wind Instability of Line-Driving Simulating Wind Structure Summary What are stellar winds? "A continuous outflow of mass from a star" Solar Wind * * * * * Sun has a very hot (10^6 K) corona High Pressure => expansion Supersonic, v ~400-700 km/s ~ v_esc >> v_sound But mass loss rate is tiny, 10^-14 Msun/yr Implies sun will lose only 0.01% of mass in whole 10^10 yr life Hot-Star Winds * Massive stars (M~10-50 Msun) are hot (T~few 10^4 K) and luminous (L~10^5-10^6 Lsun) * Wind outflow diagnosed by asymmetric "P-Cygni" lines in UV * Show v ~ 1000-3000 km/s! * Much higher mass loss rates, up to 10^-4 Msun/yr * Affects: Stellar Evolution ISM energy and mass balance Bubbles may even trigger star formation – "starbursts" * Driven by radiation pressure, scattered in spectral lines Castor, Abbott, Klein (1975; "CAK") developed basic formalism Formation of P-Cygni Line Profile Intercepting Light's Momentum * Light transports energy (& information) * But it also has momentum , p=E/c * Usually negligible, because speed c is so high. * But becomes significant for very bright objects, e.g. Lasers, Luminous stars, Quasars/AGNs * Key question: how big is force vs., e.g. gravity? * Expressed through electron scattering Eddington factor L Th gel 4r2c e e L GM ggrav 4GMc r2 * For sun, 5 O 2.710 * But for hot stars with L105 106 LO M1050M O ~ 1 Free Electron Scattering Thompson Cross Section Th = 2/3 barn Th = 0.66e-24 cm2 Line Scattering For High Quality Line Resonance: Cross Section >> Electron Scattering 8 Q~t~10Hz 10s~10 4 7 3 Q~ZQ~1010~10 lines~QTh 15 glines~10 gel 7 3 lines~10el 1 3 } iff F Fthin Doppler Shifting of Line-Absorption in an Accelerating Stellar Wind Line Scattering in an Expanding Wind Optically thick line-force Sobolev approximation independent of like inertia! CAK model of steady-state wind => + inertia gravity line-force Line-Driven Instability from Perturbed Profile Doppler Shift Time snapshot of a wind instability simulation Velocity & Density vs. Height CAK Steady-Stat 1500 -10 -11 1000 -12 -13 500 -14 0 -15 0.0 0.5 Height (R * ) 1.0 Snapshot of Velocity and Density Plotted vs. Height and Mass in a Time-Dependent Wind Simulation Flow "Structure" on the Autobahn Back Scattering from Multiple Line Resonances in a Non-montonic Velocity Field Formation of Black Troughs in Saturated P-Cygni Line-Profiles from Structured Stellar Winds P-Cygni Profile Synthesized for a Smooth (---) and Structured ( ___ ) Stellar Wind Models Profile for smooth, CAK Wind Black Trough from Structured Wind Instability Models with Energy Equation Feldmeier 1995 Computational Requirements for Stellar Wind Simulations CAK/Sobolev Models * * * line-force computed from local density and velocity gradient modest timing requirements, comparable to standard hydro allows for 2D (in principle even 3D) models, e.g. with rotation, disks, even B-field Instability Simulations * Line-force requires nonlocal solution of radiation transfer, in principle in hundreds of spectral lines of varying strength * Current approximations use integral escape probabilities * Requires computation of line optical depth * Analytically averaged over power-law line ensemble * But still requires nested integrations over * * - angle (or ray) - frequency - depth Thus far most models artificially restricted to 1D Efforts toward 2D instability simulations - 3-ray aligned grid - Short characteristics - 2nd order Sobolev (A. Feldmeier) Ray Integration Grids for 2D Radiation Hydro Models Co-Rotating Interaction Region Models log(Density) a. b. local CAK model nonlocal smooth model c. nonlocal structured model Ongoing Projects in Stellar Winds Wind Compressed Disks and a Wind Binaries Radiative BrakingQuickTime™ in Colliding GIF decompressor are needed to see this picture. O star * O star WR star *WR star Wind Rotation Spindown from Azimuthal Line-Torque a. b. -0.9 -90 -0.7 -70 -0.5 -50 -0.3 -30 -0.1 -10 g (10 3 cm/s 2 ) [V (nrf)-V (wcd)] *sin( )*r/R eq (km/s) Summary * Massive, hot, luminous stars have strong stellar winds * Driven by line-scattering of stellar radiation * Highly unstable, leading to: - high speed rarefactions - slower dense clumps - separated by Reverse Shocks * Non-monotonic velocity evident in UV line Black Troughs * But reverse shocks produce few X-rays * Ongoing problems - 2D (& 3D) models of compressible turbulence - explain X-ray scaling laws - how small-scale instability affects global wind structure, e.g. wind collisions, disks, etc. - Role of line-driving in other luminous systems, e.g. CV disks; AGNs/QSOs