论文标题
部分可观测时空混沌系统的无模型预测
UV Spectropolarimetry with Polstar: Massive Star Binary Colliding Winds
论文作者
论文摘要
巨大恒星的风对于它们直接影响星际介质以及它们对恒星的最终状态的影响至关重要,然后才能爆炸为超新星。但是,这些风的动力学主要是通过单个中心来源的照明来理解的。共振线中看到的多普勒移位是推断这些动力学的有用工具,但是从多普勒移动到距离源距离距离的映射是模棱两可的。二进制系统可以通过在风中的已知半径上提供第二光源来降低这种歧义,从轨道调制的方向看出。从风之间碰撞的性质,大型同伴还提供了有关风能通量的独特其他信息。由于巨大的恒星是强的紫外线(UV)源,并且风中的紫外线共振线不透明度很强,因此具有高分辨率光谱能力的UV仪器对于提取此动态信息至关重要。偏振能力还有助于进一步解决风力几何形状各个方面的歧义,而这些几何形状并非视线范围,因为它独特地访问了散射方向信息。我们回顾了建议的Midex尺度任务Polstar如何使用紫外线光学观测来严格限制碰撞风的物理,因此一般而言辐射驱动的风。我们提出了一个20个二元目标的样本,利用了伴侣星光照明的独特组合,并与伴侣风相撞,以探测风强度范围内的风属性。特别令人感兴趣的是,当风中的辐射转移在多个重叠的紫外线中散射到共振散射时,风加速度的径向分布会发生显着改变。
The winds of massive stars are important for their direct impact on the interstellar medium, and for their influence on the final state of a star prior to it exploding as a supernova. However, the dynamics of these winds is understood primarily via their illumination from a single central source. The Doppler shift seen in resonance lines is a useful tool for inferring these dynamics, but the mapping from that Doppler shift to the radial distance from the source is ambiguous. Binary systems can reduce this ambiguity by providing a second light source at a known radius in the wind, seen from orbitally modulated directions. From the nature of the collision between the winds, a massive companion also provides unique additional information about wind momentum fluxes. Since massive stars are strong ultraviolet (UV) sources, and UV resonance line opacity in the wind is strong, UV instruments with a high resolution spectroscopic capability are essential for extracting this dynamical information. Polarimetric capability also helps to further resolve ambiguities in aspects of the wind geometry that are not axisymmetric about the line of sight, because of its unique access to scattering direction information. We review how the proposed MIDEX-scale mission Polstar can use UV spectropolarimetric observations to critically constrain the physics of colliding winds, and hence radiatively-driven winds in general. We propose a sample of 20 binary targets, capitalizing on this unique combination of illumination by companion starlight, and collision with a companion wind, to probe wind attributes over a range in wind strengths. Of particular interest is the hypothesis that the radial distribution of the wind acceleration is altered significantly, when the radiative transfer within the winds becomes optically thick to resonance scattering in multiple overlapping UV lines.