论文标题
B-Star离心机中的突破受限质量如何控制其偶然性H-alpha发射
How the breakout-limited mass in B-star centrifugal magnetospheres controls their circumstellar H-alpha emission
论文作者
论文摘要
强烈磁性的B型恒星具有中等快速旋转的形式“离心机磁层”(CMS),从开普勒共旋转半径上方的区域的恒星风材料的磁诱捕中。一个长期以来的问题是,这种捕获材料的最终丢失是出于逐渐漂移和/或扩散性泄漏,还是通过零星的“ {\ em selbrifugal break out}'(CBO)事件,其中磁性张力不再包含建筑质量。我们在这里认为,这种B-Star CMS的Balmer $α$排放的最新经验结果极为偏爱CBO机制。最值得注意的是,这种发射的发作主要取决于开普勒半径处的田间强度,并且在很大程度上是恒星光度的{\ em独立},强烈地消除了任何漂移/扩散过程,净质量平衡取决于依赖于亮度的风力馈送率。相比之下,我们表明,在CBO模型中,磁层中的{\ em最大约束质量}独立于这种风向馈电率,并且依赖于场强和开普勒半径,这自然地解释了H $α$ susision的经验尺度,其相关的等效宽度及其线轮廓形状。但是,在后期和A型星中普遍缺乏观察到的Balmer发射,仍然可以归因于剩余的扩散或漂移泄漏水平,这不允许其较弱的风能将其CMS填充到这种排放所需的突破水平;另外,这可能是由于缺乏必要的氢的过渡到金属离子风。
Strongly magnetic B-type stars with moderately rapid rotation form `centrifugal magnetospheres' (CMs), from the magnetic trapping of stellar wind material in a region above the Kepler co-rotation radius. A longstanding question is whether the eventual loss of such trapped material occurs from gradual drift and/or diffusive leakage, or through sporadic `{\em centrifugal break out}' (CBO) events, wherein magnetic tension can no longer contain the built-up mass. We argue here that recent empirical results for Balmer-$α$ emission from such B-star CMs strongly favor the CBO mechanism. Most notably, the fact that the onset of such emission depends mainly on the field strength at the Kepler radius, and is largely {\em independent} of the stellar luminosity, strongly disfavors any drift/diffusion process, for which the net mass balance would depend on the luminosity-dependent wind feeding rate. In contrast, we show that in a CBO model the {\em maximum confined mass} in the magnetosphere is independent of this wind feeding rate, and has a dependence on field strength and Kepler radius that naturally explains the empirical scalings for the onset of H$α$ emission, its associated equivalent width, and even its line profile shapes. However, the general lack of observed Balmer emission in late-B and A-type stars could still be attributed to a residual level of diffusive or drift leakage that does not allow their much weaker winds to fill their CMs to the breakout level needed for such emission; alternatively this might result from a transition to a metal-ion wind that lacks the requisite Hydrogen.