Issue |
A&A
Volume 648, April 2021
|
|
---|---|---|
Article Number | A94 | |
Number of page(s) | 8 | |
Section | Stellar atmospheres | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202039972 | |
Published online | 19 April 2021 |
Shock-heated radiation-driven outflows as a solution to the weak-wind problem of late O-type stars
Institute of Astronomy, KU Leuven,
Celestijnenlaan 200D Box 2401,
3001
Leuven,
Belgium
e-mail: cis.lagae@astro.su.se
Received:
23
November
2020
Accepted:
22
March
2021
Context. Radiation-driven mass loss is key to our understanding of massive-star evolution. However, for low-luminosity O-type stars there are big discrepancies between theoretically predicted and empirically derived mass-loss rates (called the weak-wind problem).
Aims. We compute radiation-line-driven wind models of a typical weak-wind star to determine its temperature structure and the corresponding impact on ultra-violet (UV) line formation.
Methods. We carried out hydrodynamic simulations of the line-deshadowing instability (LDI) for a weak-wind star in the Galaxy. Subsequently, we used this LDI model as input in a short-characteristics radiative transfer code to compute synthetic UV line profiles.
Results. We find that the line-driven weak wind is significantly shock heated to high temperatures and is unable to cool down efficiently. This results in a complex temperature structure where more than half of the wind volume has temperatures significantly higher than the stellar effective temperature. Therefore, a substantial portion of the weak wind will be more ionised, resulting in a reduction of the UV line opacity and therefore in weaker line profiles for a given mass-loss rate. Quantifying this, we find that weak-wind mass-loss rates derived from unsaturated UV lines could be underestimated by a factor of between 10 and 100 if the high-temperature gas is not properly taken into account in the spectroscopic analysis. This offers a tentative basic explanation for the weak-wind problem: line-driven weak winds are not really weaker than theoretically expected, but rather a large portion of their wind volume is much hotter than the stellar effective temperature.
Key words: stars: mass-loss / stars: winds, outflows / instabilities / radiation: dynamics / line: profiles
© ESO 2021
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