Self Regulated Shocks in Massive Star Binary Systems
E. R. Parkin, S. A. Sim

TL;DR
This paper investigates how X-ray emission from wind-wind collisions in massive star binaries influences stellar wind acceleration, revealing a feedback mechanism that affects shock properties and collision likelihood.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of self regulated shocks, showing how X-ray feedback alters wind dynamics and collision conditions in massive star binaries.
Findings
X-ray feedback inhibits wind acceleration and lowers shock temperatures.
Self regulated shocks extend the range of binary separations with wind-photosphere collisions.
Model results align reasonably with observed X-ray luminosities.
Abstract
In an early-type, massive star binary system, X-ray bright shocks result from the powerful collision of stellar winds driven by radiation pressure on spectral line transitions. We examine the influence of the X-rays from the wind-wind collision shocks on the radiative driving of the stellar winds using steady state models that include a parameterized line force with X-ray ionization dependence. Our primary result is that X-ray radiation from the shocks inhibits wind acceleration and can lead to a lower pre-shock velocity, and a correspondingly lower shocked plasma temperature, yet the intrinsic X-ray luminosity of the shocks, LX remains largely unaltered, with the exception of a modest increase at small binary separations. Due to the feedback loop between the ionizing X-rays from the shocks and the wind-driving, we term this scenario as self regulated shocks. This effect is found to…
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