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A&A 446, 1001-1019 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20053649
Radio emission models of colliding-wind binary systems. Inclusion of IC cooling
J. M. Pittard1, S. M. Dougherty2, R. F. Coker3, E. O'Connor2, 4 and N. J. Bolingbroke2, 51 School of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
e-mail: jmp@ast.leeds.ac.uk
2 National Research Council of Canada, Herzberg Institute for Astrophysics, Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory, PO Box 248, Penticton, BC, V2A 6J9, Canada
3 Los Alamos National Laboratory, X-2 MS T-087, Los Alamos, NM 87545, USA
4 Physics Department, University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, PEI, Canada
5 Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Victoria, 3800 Finnerty Rd, Victoria, BC, Canada
(Received 17 June 2005 / Accepted 3 October 2005 )
Abstract
Radio emission models of colliding wind binaries (CWBs) have
been discussed by Dougherty et al. (2003). We extend these models by
considering the temporal and spatial evolution of the energy
distribution of relativistic electrons as they advect downstream from
their shock acceleration site. The energy spectrum evolves
significantly due to the strength of inverse-Compton (IC) cooling in
these systems, and a full numerical evaluation of the synchrotron
emission and absorption coefficients is made. We have demonstrated
that the geometry of the WCR and the streamlines of the flow within it
lead to a spatially dependent break frequency in the synchrotron
emission. We therefore do not observe a single, sharp break in the
synchrotron spectrum integrated over the WCR, but rather a steepening
of the synchrotron spectrum towards higher frequencies. We also
observe that emission from the wind-collision region (WCR) may appear
brightest near the shocks, since the impact of IC cooling on the
non-thermal electron distribution is greatest near the contact
discontinuity (CD), and demonstrate that the impact of IC cooling on
the observed radio emission increases significantly with decreasing
binary separation. We study how the synchrotron emission changes in
response to departures from equipartition, and investigate how the
thermal flux from the WCR varies with binary separation.
Since the emission from the WCR is optically thin, we
see a substantial fraction of this emission at certain viewing angles,
and we show that the thermal emission from a CWB can mimic a thermal plus
non-thermal composite spectrum if the thermal emission from the WCR
becomes comparable to that from the unshocked winds.
Key words: stars: binaries: general -- stars: early-type -- stars: individual: WR 147 -- stars: Wolf-Rayet -- stars: winds, outflows -- radio continuum: stars
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2006
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