ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Constraining general massive-star physics by exploring the unique properties of magnetic O-stars: Rotation, macroturbulence, and sub-surface convection

107   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Jon Sundqvist
 تاريخ النشر 2014
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف Jon O. Sundqvist




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

A quite remarkable aspect of non-interacting O-stars with detected surface magnetic fields is that they all are very slow rotators. This paper uses this unique property to first demonstrate that the projected rotational speeds of massive, hot stars, as derived using current standard spectroscopic techniques, can be severely overestimated when significant macroturbulent line-broadening is present. This may, for example, have consequences for deriving the statistical distribution of rotation rates in massive-star populations, and for the use of these rates in stellar evolution models. It is next shown how such macroturbulence (seemingly a universal feature of hot, massive stars) is present in all but one of the magnetic O-stars, namely NGC 1624-2. Assuming then a simple model in which NGC 1624-2s exceptionally strong, large-scale magnetic field suppresses atmospheric motions down to layers where the magnetic and gas pressures are comparable, first empirical constraints on the formation depth of this enigmatic hot-star macroturbulence are derived. The results suggest an origin in the thin sub-surface convection zone of massive stars, consistent with a physical origin due to, e.g., stellar pulsations excited by the convective motions.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We study the convection zones in the outer envelope of hot massive stars which are caused by opacity peaks associated with iron and helium ionization. We determine the occurrence and properties of these convection zones as function of the stellar par ameters. We then confront our results with observations of OB stars. A stellar evolution code is used to compute a grid of massive star models at different metallicities. In these models, the mixing length theory is used to characterize the envelope convection zones. We find the iron convection zone (FeCZ) to be more prominent for lower surface gravity, higher luminosity and higher initial metallicity. It is absent for luminosities below about $10^{3.2}Lsun$, $10^{3.9}Lsun$, and $10^{4.2}$Lsun$ for the Galaxy, LMC and SMC, respectively. We map the strength of the FeCZ on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram for three metallicities, and compare this with the occurrence of observational phenomena in O stars: microturbulence, non-radial pulsations, wind clumping, and line profile variability. The confirmation of all three trends for the FeCZ as function of stellar parameters by empirical microturbulent velocities argues for a physical connection between sub-photospheric convective motions and small scale stochastic velocities in the photosphere of O- and B-type stars. We further suggest that clumping in the inner parts of the winds of OB stars could be caused by the same mechanism, and that magnetic fields produced in the FeCZ could appear at the surface of OB stars as diagnosed by discrete absorption components in ultraviolet absorption lines.
We have derived relations between full-width-half-maxima and equivalent widths of metallic absorption lines in the spectra of RR~Lyrae stars to estimate new upper limits on the axial equatorial rotational velocities of RR~Lyrae and metal-poor red hor izontal branch stars (RHB). We also have derived the variations of RR~Lyrae macroturbulent velocities during the pulsation cycles. In RRab cycles the line widths are dominated by phase-dependent convolutions of axial rotation and macroturbulence, which we designate as V_macrot. The behavior of V_macrot is remarkably uniform among the RRab stars, but the behavior of V_macrot among RRc stars varies strongly from star to star. The RRab stars exhibit an upper limit on V_macrot of 5 +/- 1 km/s with weak evidence of an anti-correlation with T_eff. The RRc minima range from 2 to 12 km/s. The abrupt decline in large rotations with decreasing T_eff at the blue boundary of the instability strip and the apparently smooth continuous variation among the RRab and RHB stars suggests that HB stars gain/lose surface angular momentum on time scales short compared to HB lifetimes. V_macrot values for our metal-poor RHB stars agree well with those derived by Fourier analysis of an independent but less metal-poor sample of Carney et al. (2008); they conform qualitatively to the expectations of Tanner et al. (2013). A general conclusion of our investigation is that surface angular momentum as measured by V_rot*sini is not a reliable indicator of total stellar angular momentum anywhere along the HB.
To investigate statistically whether magnetic fields in massive stars are ubiquitous or appear in stars with specific spectral classification, certain ages, or in a special environment, we acquired 41 new spectropolarimetric observations for 36 stars . Among the observed sample roughly half of the stars are probable members of clusters at different ages, whereas the remaining stars are field stars not known to belong to any cluster or association. Spectropolarimetric observations were obtained during three different nights using the low-resolution spectropolarimetric mode of FORS2 (FOcal Reducer low dispersion Spectrograph) mounted on the 8-m Antu telescope of the VLT. To assess the membership in open clusters and associations, we used astrometric catalogues with the best currently available kinematic and photometric data. A field at a significance level of 3sigma was detected in ten O-type stars. Importantly, the largest longitudinal magnetic fields were measured in two Of?p stars: <B_z>=-381+-122G for CPD-282561 and <B_z>=-297+-62G for HD148937, previously detected by us as magnetic. The obtained observations of HD148937 on three different nights indicate that the magnetic field is slightly variable. Our new measurements support our previous conclusion that large-scale organized magnetic fields with polar field strengths in excess of 1kG are not widespread among O-type stars. Among the stars with a detected magnetic field, only one star, HD156154, belongs to an open cluster at high membership probability. According to previous kinematic studies, four magnetic O-type stars in the sample are well-known candidate runaway stars.
266 - Sean P. Matt 2011
The stellar luminosity and depth of the convective envelope vary rapidly with mass for G- and K-type main sequence stars. In order to understand how these properties influence the convective turbulence, differential rotation, and meridional circulati on, we have carried out 3D dynamical simulations of the interiors of rotating main sequence stars, using the anelastic spherical harmonic (ASH) code. The stars in our simulations have masses of 0.5, 0.7, 0.9, and 1.1 M_sun, corresponding to spectral types K7 through G0, and rotate at the same angular speed as the sun. We identify several trends of convection zone properties with stellar mass, exhibited by the simulations. The convective velocities, temperature contrast between up- and down-flows, and meridional circulation velocities all increase with stellar luminosity. As a consequence of the trend in convective velocity, the Rossby number (at a fixed rotation rate) increases and the convective turnover timescales decrease significantly with increasing stellar mass. The 3 lowest mass cases exhibit solar-like differential rotation, in a sense that they show a maximum rotation at the equator and minimum at higher latitudes, but the 1.1 M_sun case exhibits anti-solar rotation. At low mass, the meridional circulation is multi-cellular and aligned with the rotation axis; as the mass increases, the circulation pattern tends toward a unicellular structure covering each hemisphere in the convection zone.
The time evolution of angular momentum and surface rotation of massive stars is strongly influenced by fossil magnetic fields via magnetic braking. We present a new module containing a simple, comprehensive implementation of such a field at the surfa ce of a massive star within the Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) software instrument. We test two limiting scenarios for magnetic braking: distributing the angular momentum loss throughout the star in the first case, and restricting the angular momentum loss to a surface reservoir in the second case. We perform a systematic investigation of the rotational evolution using a grid of OB star models with surface magnetic fields ($M_star=5-60$ M$_odot$, $Omega/Omega_{rm crit} =0.2-1.0$, $B_{rm p} =1-20$ kG). We then employ a representative grid of B-type star models ($M_star=5, 10, 15$ M$_odot$, $Omega/Omega_{rm crit} =0.2 , 0.5, 0.8$, $B_{rm p} = 1, 3 ,10, 30$ kG) to compare to the results of a recent self-consistent analysis of the sample of known magnetic B-type stars. We infer that magnetic massive stars arrive at the zero age main sequence with a range of rotation rates, rather than with one common value. In particular, some stars are required to have close-to-critical rotation at the ZAMS. However, magnetic braking yields surface rotation rates converging to a common low value, making it difficult to infer the initial rotation rates of evolved, slowly-rotating stars.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا