scholarly journals An MHD Model of Be Stars with Disks

2000 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 611-616
Author(s):  
A. E. Dudorov ◽  
R. E. Pudritz

AbstractAn investigation of the formation and evolution of Be stars show that these stars could have dipolar fossil magnetic fields. This magnetic field should constrain the circumstellar magnetic disk and influence its dynamical features. For studying these effects we refine the alphamodel of accretion disks of Shakura and Sunyaev by incorporating into this model the evolution of large-scale magnetic fields. In the frame of our model we can investigate the rotational history of the star with the disk and the ionization and thermal properties of disks. We show in particular that in the magnetopause region a current sheet can form that can generate X-ray radiation.

2004 ◽  
Vol 217 ◽  
pp. 70-76
Author(s):  
Michael D. Gregg ◽  
Michael J. West

Gravitational interactions in rich clusters can strip material from the outer parts of galaxies or even completely disrupt entire systems, giving rise to large scale, low surface brightness ghostly features stretching across intergalactic space. The nearby Coma and Centaurus clusters both have striking examples of galaxy ghosts, in the form of 100 kpc-long plumes of intergalactic debris. By searching HST archival images, we have found numerous other examples of galaxy ghosts in rich clusters at low redshift, evidence that galaxy destruction and recycling are ubiquitous, important in cluster formation and evolution, and continue to mold clusters at the present epoch. Many ghosts appear in X-ray bright clusters, perhaps signaling a connection with energetic subcluster mergers.The fate of such material has important ramifications for cluster evolution. Our new HST WFPC2 V & I images of a portion of the Centaurus plume reveal that it contains an excess of discrete objects with −12 < MV < −6, consistent with being globular clusters or smaller dwarf galaxies. This tidally liberated material is being recycled directly into the intracluster population of stars, dwarf galaxies, globular clusters, and gas, which may have been built largely from a multitude of similar events over the life of the cluster.


2020 ◽  
Vol 641 ◽  
pp. A113
Author(s):  
D. Modirrousta-Galian ◽  
B. Stelzer ◽  
E. Magaudda ◽  
J. Maldonado ◽  
M. Güdel ◽  
...  

Aims. In this paper we present a deep X-ray observation of the nearby M dwarf GJ 357 and use it to put constraints on the atmospheric evolution of its planet, GJ 357 b. We also analyse the systematic errors in the stellar parameters of GJ 357 in order to see how they affect the perceived planetary properties. Methods. By comparing the observed X-ray luminosity of its host star, we estimate the age of GJ 357 b as derived from a recent XMM-Newton observation (log Lx [erg s−1] = 25.73), with Lx− age relations for M dwarfs. We find that GJ 357 presents one of the lowest X-ray activity levels ever measured for an M dwarf, and we put a lower limit on its age of 5 Gyr. Using this age limit, we performed a backwards reconstruction of the original primordial atmospheric reservoir. Furthermore, by considering the systematic errors in the stellar parameters, we find a range of possible planetary masses, radii, and densities. Results. From the backwards reconstruction of the irradiation history of GJ 357 b’s we find that the upper limit of its initial primordial atmospheric mass is ~38 M⊕. An initial atmospheric reservoir significantly larger than this may have survived through the X-ray and ultraviolet irradiation history, which would not be consistent with current observations that suggest a telluric composition. However, given the relatively small mass of GJ 357 b, even accreting a primordial envelope ≳10 M⊕ would have been improbable as an unusually low protoplanetary disc opacity, large-scale migration, and a weak interior luminosity would have been required. For this reason, we discard the possibility that GJ 357 b was born as a Neptunian- or Jovian-sized body. In spite of the unlikelihood of a currently existing primordial envelope, volcanism and outgassing may have contributed to a secondary atmosphere. Under this assumption, we present three different synthetic IR spectra for GJ 357 b that one might expect, consisting of 100% CO2, 100% SO2, and 75% N2, 24% CO2 and 1% H2O, respectively. Future observations with space-based IR spectroscopy missions will be able to test these models. Finally, we show that the uncertainties in the stellar and planetary quantities do not have a significant effect on the estimated mass or radius of GJ 357 b.


1990 ◽  
Vol 115 ◽  
pp. 21-31
Author(s):  
W. H. Goldstein

AbstractPrecision spectroscopy of solar plasmas has historically been the goad for advances in calculating the atomic physics and dynamics of highly ionized atoms. Recent efforts to understand the laboratory plasmas associated with magnetic and inertial confinement fusion, and with X-ray laser research, have played a similar role. Developments spurred by laboratory plasma research are applicable to the modeling of high-resolution spectra from both solar and cosmic X-ray sources, such as the photo-ionized plasmas associated with accretion disks. Three of these developments in large scale atomic modeling are reviewed: a new method for calculating large arrays of collisional excitation rates, a sum rule based method for extending collisional-radiative models and modeling the effects of autoionizing resonances, and a detailed level accounting calculation of resonant excitation rates in FeXVII.


2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S274) ◽  
pp. 340-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luigina Feretti ◽  
Gabriele Giovannini ◽  
Federica Govoni ◽  
Matteo Murgia

AbstractThe first detection of a diffuse radio source in a cluster of galaxies, dates back to the 1959 (Coma Cluster, Large et al. 1959). Since then, synchrotron radiating radio sources have been found in several clusters, and represent an important cluster component which is linked to the thermal gas. Such sources indicate the existence of large scale magnetic fields and of a population of relativistic electrons in the cluster volume. The observational results provide evidence that these phenomena are related to turbulence and shock-structures in the intergalactic medium, thus playing a major role in the evolution of the large scale structure in the Universe. The interaction between radio sources and cluster gas is well established in particular at the center of cooling core clusters, where feedback from AGN is a necessary ingredient to adequately describe the formation and evolution of galaxies and host clusters.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (S302) ◽  
pp. 330-333
Author(s):  
V. Petit ◽  
D. H. Cohen ◽  
Y. Nazé ◽  
M. Gagné ◽  
R. H. D. Townsend ◽  
...  

AbstractThe magnetic activity of solar-type and low-mass stars is a well known source of coronal X-ray emission. At the other end of the main sequence, X-rays emission is instead associated with the powerful, radiatively driven winds of massive stars. Indeed, the intrinsically unstable line-driving mechanism of OB star winds gives rise to shock-heated, soft emission (~0.5 keV) distributed throughout the wind. Recently, the latest generation of spectropolarimetric instrumentation has uncovered a population of massive OB-stars hosting strong, organized magnetic fields. The magnetic characteristics of these stars are similar to the apparently fossil magnetic fields of the chemically peculiar ApBp stars. Magnetic channeling of these OB stars' strong winds leads to the formation of large-scale shock-heated magnetospheres, which can modify UV resonance lines, create complex distributions of cooled Halpha emitting material, and radiate hard (~2-5 keV) X-rays. This presentation summarizes our coordinated observational and modelling efforts to characterize the manifestation of these magnetospheres in the X-ray domain, providing an important contrast between the emission originating in shocks associated with the large-scale fossil fields of massive stars, and the X-rays associated with the activity of complex, dynamo-generated fields in lower-mass stars.


2004 ◽  
Vol 217 ◽  
pp. 390-399 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Christopher Mihos

Galaxy interactions expel a significant amount of stars and gas into the surrounding environment. I review the formation and evolution of the tidal debris spawned during these collisions, and describe how this evolution depends on the large scale environment in which the galaxies live. In addition to acting as a long-lived tracer of the interaction history of galaxies, the evolution of this material - on both large scales and small - has important ramifications for galactic recycling processes, the feeding of the intracluster light and intracluster medium within galaxy clusters, and the delayed formation of galactic disks and dwarf galaxies.


1999 ◽  
Vol 169 ◽  
pp. 187-190
Author(s):  
Jacques Babel

AbstractWe consider the effect of large scale magnetic fields on the circumstellar environment of hot stars. In these stars, magnetic fields of order of 100 G lead to magnetically confined wind shocks (MCWS) and then to the existence of large X-ray emitting region. MCWS lead also to the presence of corotating cooling disks around hot stars.We discuss the case of θ1 Ori C, which is perhaps the hottest analog to Bp stars and consider the effect from rotation and instabilities. We finally discuss the case of the Herbig Ae-Be HD 104237 and show that MCWS might also explain the X-ray emission from this star.


2020 ◽  
Vol 498 (4) ◽  
pp. 5532-5540
Author(s):  
Yusuke Fujimoto ◽  
Mark R Krumholz ◽  
Shu-ichiro Inutsuka ◽  
Alan P Boss ◽  
Larry R Nittler

ABSTRACT Several observations suggest that the Solar system has been located in a region affected by massive stellar feedback for at least a few Myr; these include detection of live 60Fe in deep-sea archives and Antarctic snow, the broad angular distribution of 26Al around the Galactic plane seen in all-sky γ-ray maps, and the all-sky soft X-ray background. However, our position inside the Galactic disc makes it difficult to fully characterize this environment, and our limited time baseline provides no information about its formation history or relation to large-scale galactic dynamics. We explore these questions by using an N-body + hydrodynamics simulation of a Milky-Way-like galaxy to identify stars on Sun-like orbits whose environments would produce conditions consistent with those we observe. We find that such stars are uncommon but not exceptionally rare. These stars are found predominantly near the edges of spiral arms, and lie inside kpc-scale bubbles that are created by multiple generations of star formation in the arm. We investigate the stars’ trajectories and find that the duration of the stay in the bubble ranges from 20 to 90 Myr. The duration is governed by the crossing time of stars across the spiral arm. This is generally shorter than the bubble lifetime, which is ∼100 Myr as a result of the continuous gas supply provided by the arm environment.


1997 ◽  
Vol 163 ◽  
pp. 443-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Matsumoto ◽  
K. Shibata

AbstractWe carried out three-dimensional global MHD simulations of jet formation from an accretion disk threaded by large-scale magnetic fields. Numerical results show that bipolar jets with maximum speed υjet ~ υKepler are created. The surface layer of the disk accretes faster than the equatorial part because magnetic braking most effectively affects that layer. Accretion proceeds along spiral channels which correspond to the surface avalanche flow appearing in previous axisymmetric simulations. Spirally shaped low β (= Pgas/Pmag < 1) regions appear in the innermost part of accretion disks where toroidal magnetic fields become dominant.


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