On the behaviour of stellar winds that exceed the photon-tiring limit
Allard Jan van Marle, Stanley P. Owocki, Nir J. Shaviv

TL;DR
This paper explores the complex, variable behaviour of super-Eddington stellar winds exceeding the photon-tiring limit through 1-D simulations, revealing high-density shells and reduced observable luminosity.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed numerical analysis of time-dependent, continuum-driven stellar winds surpassing the photon-tiring limit, highlighting their hierarchical structure and observational implications.
Findings
High-density shells form near the star, oscillating and unable to escape.
At larger distances, the wind becomes outward-flowing but remains highly variable.
Stars exceeding the photon-tiring limit appear dimmer, with luminosity less than half of their total energy output.
Abstract
Stars can produce steady-state winds through radiative driving as long as the mechanical luminosity of the wind does not exceed the radiative luminosity at its base. This upper bound on the mass loss rate is known as the photon-tiring limit. Once above this limit, the radiation field is unable to lift all the material out of the gravitational potential of the star, such that only part of it can escape and reach infinity. The rest stalls and falls back toward the stellar surface, making a steady-state wind impossible. Photon-tiring is not an issue for line-driven winds since they cannot achieve sufficiently high mass loss rates. It can however become important if the star exceeds the Eddington limit and continuum interaction becomes the dominant driving mechanism. This paper investigates the time-dependent behaviour of stellar winds that exceed the photon-tiring limit, using 1-D…
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