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Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton accretion by binary stars

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 Added by Tom Comerford
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Binary stars often move through an ambient medium from which they accrete material and angular momentum, as in triple-star systems, star-forming clouds, young globular clusters and in the centres of galaxies. A binary form of Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton accretion results whereby the accretion rate depends on the binary properties: the stellar masses and separation, and the relative wind speed. We present the results of simulations performed with the hydrodynamic code GANDALF, to determine the mass accretion rates over a range of binary separations, inclinations and mass ratios. When the binary separation is short, the binary system accretes like a single star, while accretion onto stars in wide binaries is barely affected by their companion. We investigate intermediate-separation systems in some detail, finding that as the binary separation is increased, accretion rates smoothly decrease from the rate equal to that of a single star to the rate expected from two isolated stars. The form of this decrease depends on the relative centre-of-mass velocity of the binary and the gas, with faster-moving binaries showing a shallower decrease. Accretion rates vary little with orbital inclination, except when the orbit is side-on and the stars pass through each others wakes. The specific angular momentum accretion rate also depends on the inclination but is never sufficient to prevent the binary orbit from contracting. Our results may be applied to accretion onto protostars, pollution of stars in globular and nuclear clusters, and wind mass-transfer in multiple stellar systems.



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339 - T. Foglizzo (SAp , CEA , Saclay 1999
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66 - Philip J. Armitage 2020
Hermann Bondis 1952 paper On spherically symmetrical accretion is recognized as one of the foundations of accretion theory. Although Bondi later remarked that it was not much more than an examination exercise, his mathematical analysis of spherical accretion on to a point mass has found broad use across fields of astrophysics that were embryonic or non-existent at the time of the papers publication. In this non-technical review, I describe the motivations for Bondis work, and briefly discuss some of the applications of Bondi accretion in high energy astrophysics, galaxy formation, and star formation.
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