Title: Astrophysics 2: Stellar and Circumstellar Physics
1Astrophysics 2Stellar and Circumstellar Physics
7. X-ray Binaries (3)
http//www.arc.hokkai-s-u.ac.jp/
okazaki/astrophys-2/
27.5 X-ray outbursts in Be/X-ray binaries
- Most Be/X-ray binaries show only transient X-ray
activity - Periodical (or Type I) outbursts, separated by
the orbital period. - Giant (or Type II) outbursts, which last longer
than Type I and show no orbital modulation.
3Type I/II X-ray outbursts(2S 1417-62)
(taken from Bildsten et al. 1997)
47.6. Accretion disk simulations of Be/X-ray
binaries
7.6.1. Numerical model
- 3D SPH code (Bate et al. 1995)
- Be star and NS as sink particles
-
- Constant mass ejection from the the Be star
(unless otherwise noted) - Isothermal
57.6.2 Accretion in low eccentricity systems
low e
strong truncation (i.e., large gap between Be
disk and compact object)
low mass-transfer rate
low accretion rate
No Type I X-ray outbursts
6Decretion disk simulation
(Okazaki et al. 2002)
Mass transfer rate
7Accretion disk simualtions
(Hayasaki Okazaki 2004, 2005, 2006)
Accretion disks evolve through three distinct
phases
- Developing phase Evolution towards a Kepelrian
disk. - Transition phase Accretion rate increases as
disk grows. - Quasi-equilibrium phase accretion rate balanced
with mass-transfer rate.
8In general, viscous time-scale is much longer
than the orbital period
Persistent accretion disk with orbital modulation
e0.34, i0
(Hayasaki Okazaki 2006)
9Evolution of the accretion rate (e0.34)
- Accretion disk evolves towards a
quasi-equilibrium state - Accretion rate too low for Type I's
(Hayasaki Okazaki 2006)
10Evolution of the accretion rate (2)
11Enhanced accretion by an inwardly propagating,
one-armed density wave
127.6.3 Accretion in high eccentricity systems
high e
weak truncation (i.e., small gap between Be disk
and compact object)
high mass-transfer rate
high accretion rate
Type I X-ray outbursts
13Decretion disk simulation
(Romero et al. 2007)
Mass transfer rate
14Accretion disk simulation
Accretion rate
157.6.4 Summary on the origin of Type I outbursts
- Low-eccentricity systems are unlikely to show
regular Type I outbursts. They can show transient
Type I's when the Be disk is strongly disturbed. - Highly eccentric systems (with short orbital
periods) are capable of causing regular Type I
X-ray outbursts.
167.7 Origin of Type II X-ray outbursts
Observed characteristics
- Giant ( ) outbursts which
last much longer than Type Is - Strong disturbances in the Be disk, e.g.,
- Disk warping before Type II outbursts (4U011563)
- Reduction/growth of the Be disk size
before/during Type II outbursts (A053526) - Be disk is often lost after a Type II
17Profile variations in 4U011563
(Negueruela et al. 2001)
18Interpretation
Precessing warped disk
19A Scenario for Type II Outbursts
Formation and growth of the Be disk
Strong disturbances in Be disk
- Radiation driven warping?
- Strong disk elongation by global density waves?
A series of Type I and II outbursts
Loss of Be disk
20Summary on the origin of Type II outbursts
- Long-term, multi-wavelength observations of a few
Be/X-ray binaries have revealed that strong
disturbances in Be disks, e.g., disk warping,
trigger Type II X-ray outbursts (and Type I's
associated with them). - The mechanism(s) that causes strong disturbances
and subsequent large mass supply to NS is unknown.
217.8 Gamma-ray Binary LS I 61 303
- One of three HMXBs emitting TeV gamma-rays
- A Be/X-ray binary (B0Ve NS or BH
- 26.5 d, e0.72)
- Weak X-rays ( )
- Does accretion occur?
- Cometary tail in VLBA maps
- Jet or colliding wind region?
22Detection of TeV gamma-rays with MAGIC
(Albert et al. 2006)
LS I 61 303
Phase 0.2-0.3
Phase 0.4-0.7
23VLBA observations of LS I 61 303
(Dhawan et al. 2006, astro-ph/0611628)
243 HMXBs emitting TeV gamma-rays
LS 5039 O6.5V NS or BH, 3.9 d, e0.35. B
125963 B2Ve NS, 3.4 yr, e0.87. LS I 61
303 B0Ve NS or BH, 26.5 d, e0.72.
colliding winds
colliding winds
colliding winds or accretion/ejection?
25No way to explain the radio map with colliding
wind regions
26SPH simulation of colliding winds in LS I 61 303
x-y plane (orbital plane)
x-z plane (y0)
27SPH simulation of the interaction between the Be
disk and the companion
Periastron passage
28Accretion disk simulation
Regular orbital modulation
Shrinking at periastron ( )
Enhanced accretion by density wave
Gradual expansion until next periastron
29Mosaic of Be disk and accretion disk simulations
Periastron passage
30Accretion rate profile
Detection with MAGIC
Optically thick
31Summary of LS I 61 303 sims
- The shape of wind interaction surface doesnt
agree with the VLBA maps. - Accretion/ejection scenario is still viable as a
model for LS I 61 303 - Models with a highly-inclined Be disk are worth
studying, but they are likely to give much lower
accretion rates than the coplanar model does.