Multi-dimensional models of circumstellar shells around evolved massive stars
Allard Jan van Marle, Rony Keppens

TL;DR
This paper uses 2-D and 3-D simulations to study the structure of circumstellar shells around evolved massive stars, revealing how different wind interactions produce observable nebular features.
Contribution
It demonstrates that 3-D models are essential for accurately reproducing the complex morphologies of circumstellar shells and distinguishing progenitor star scenarios.
Findings
3-D models produce realistic nebular morphologies
Instabilities differ between blue variable and red supergiant wind interactions
Simulations help interpret observed circumstellar nebulae
Abstract
Massive stars shape their surrounding medium through the force of their stellar winds, which collide with the circumstellar medium. Because the characteristics of these stellar winds vary over the course of the evolution of the star, the circumstellar matter becomes a reflection of the stellar evolution and can be used to determine the characteristics of the progenitor star. In particular, whenever a fast wind phase follows a slow wind phase, the fast wind sweeps up its predecessor in a shell, which is observed as a circumstellar nebula. We make 2-D and 3-D numerical simulations of fast stellar winds sweeping up their slow predecessors to investigate whether numerical models of these shells have to be 3-D, or whether 2-D models are sufficient to reproduce the shells correctly. We focus on those situations where a fast Wolf-Rayet (WR) star wind sweeps up the slower wind emitted by its…
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