4.7 Article

Bipolar planetary nebulae from outflow collimation by common envelope evolution

期刊

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa2145

关键词

hydrodynamics; binaries: close; planetary nebulae: general; planetary nebulae: individual: OH 231.8+04.2

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [AST-1515648, AST-1813298, ACI-1548562]
  2. Department of Energy [DE-SC0001063, DE-SC0020432, DE-SC0020434]
  3. Space Telescope Science Institute [HST-AR-14563.001-A]
  4. University of Rochester Frank J. Horton Graduate Research Fellowship
  5. CITA National Postdoctoral Fellowship
  6. Macquarie University Research Excellence Scholarship
  7. Australian Research Council [FT120100452]
  8. KITP UC Santa Barbara - NSF [PHY-1748958]
  9. Aspen Center for Physics - NSF [PHY-1607611]
  10. NASA [HST-AR-15044]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The morphology of bipolar planetary nebulae (PNe) can be attributed to interactions between a fast wind from the central engine and the dense toroidal-shaped ejecta left over from common envelope (CE) evolution. Here we use the 3D hydrodynamic adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) code ASTROBEAR to study the possibility that bipolar PN outflows can emerge collimated even from an uncollimated spherical wind in the aftermath of a CE event. The output of a single CE simulation via the smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) code PHANTOM serves as the initial conditions. Four cases of winds, all with high enough momenta to account for observed high momenta pre-PN outflows, are injected spherically from the region of the CE binary remnant into the ejecta. We compare cases with two different momenta and cases with no radiative cooling versus application of optically thin emission via a cooling curve to the outflow. Our simulations show that in all cases highly collimated bipolar outflows result from deflection of the spherical wind via the interaction with the CE ejecta. Significant asymmetries between the top and bottom lobes are seen in all cases. The asymmetry is strongest for the lower momentum case with radiative cooling. While real post-CE winds may be aspherical, our models show that collimation via 'inertial confinement' will be strong enough to create jet-like outflows even beginning with maximally uncollimated drivers. Our simulations reveal detailed shock structures in the shock-focused inertial confinement (SFIC) model and develop a lens-shaped inner shock that is a new feature of SFIC-driven bipolar lobes.

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