4.6 Article

Simulating observable structures due to a perturbed interstellar medium in front of astrospheric bow shocks in 3D MHD

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 650, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202039836

Keywords

stars: winds, outflows; magnetohydrodynamics (MHD); shock waves

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [SCHE334/9-2]
  2. Ruhr Astroparticle and Plasma Physics (RAPP) Center - MERCUR project [St-2014-040]

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This study simulated the observable structure of the astrosphere of the runaway blue supergiant lambda Cephei by introducing perturbations into the otherwise homogeneous interstellar medium, leading to different shock structures and observational images depending on the type of perturbation and viewing angles.
Context. While the shapes of many observed bow shocks can be reproduced by simple astrosphere models, more elaborate approaches have recently been used to explain differing observable structures. Aims. By placing perturbations of an otherwise homogeneous interstellar medium in front of the astrospheric bow shock of the runaway blue supergiant lambda Cephei, the observable structure of the model astrosphere is significantly altered, providing insight into the origin of perturbed bow shock images. Methods. Three-dimensional single-fluid magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) models of stationary astrospheres were subjected to various types of perturbations and simulated until stationarity was reached again. As examples, simple perturbations of the available MHD parameters (number density, bulk velocity, temperature, and magnetic field) as well as a more complex perturbation were chosen. Synthetic observations were generated by line-of-sight integration of the model data, producing H alpha, 70 mu m dust emission, and bremsstrahlung maps of the perturbed astrosphere's evolution. Results. The resulting shock structures and observational images differ strongly depending on the type of the injected perturbation and the viewing angles, forming arc-like protrusions or bifurcations of the bow shock structure, as well as rings, arcs, and irregular structures detached from the bow shock.

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