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New hydrodynamic solutions for line-driven winds of hot massive stars using Lambert $W$-function

Authors :
Gormaz-Matamala, Alex C.
Curé, Michel
Hillier, D. John
Najarro, Francisco
Kubátová, Brankica
Kubát, Jiří
Source :
2021 The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 920, Issue 1, id.64, 30 pp
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Hot massive stars present strong stellar winds that are driven by absorption, scattering and re\-emission of photons by the ions of the atmosphere (\textit{line-driven winds}). A better comprehension of this phenomenon, and a more accurate calculation of hydrodynamics and radiative acceleration is required to reduce the number of free parameters in spectral fitting, to determine accurate wind parameters such as mass-loss rates and velocity profiles. We use the non-LTE model-atmosphere code CMFGEN to numerically solve the radiative transfer equation in the stellar atmosphere and to calculate the radiative acceleration $g_\text{rad}(r)$. Under the assumption that the radiative acceleration depends only on the radial coordinate, we solve analytically the equation of motion by means of the Lambert $W$-function. An iterative procedure between the solution of the radiative transfer and the equation of motion is executed in order to obtain a final self-consistent velocity field that is no longer based on any $\beta$-law. We apply the Lambert-procedure to three O supergiant stars ($\zeta$-Puppis, HD~165763 and $\alpha$-Cam) and discuss the Lambert-solutions for the velocity profiles. It is found that, even without recalculation of the mass-loss rate, the Lambert-procedure allows the calculation of consistent velocity profiles that reduce the number of free parameters when a spectral fitting using CMFGEN is performed. Synthetic spectra calculated from our Lambert-solutions show significant differences compared to the initial $\beta$-law CMFGEN models. The results indicate the importance of consistent velocity profile calculation in the CMFGEN code and its usage in a fitting procedure and interpretation of observed spectra.<br />Comment: Published in the Astrophysical Journal (ApJ), in 13 October 2021

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
2021 The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 920, Issue 1, id.64, 30 pp
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2106.15060
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac12c9