Critically-rotating accretors and non-conservative evolution in Algols
R. Deschamps, L. Siess, P. J. Davis, A. Jorissen

TL;DR
This study models the spin and orbital evolution of Algol binary systems with rapidly rotating accretors, highlighting the roles of various spin-down mechanisms and the impact of hotspot-induced mass loss on system evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed binary evolution model incorporating all relevant torques and a new hotspot mass loss prescription, advancing understanding of non-conservative evolution in Algols.
Findings
Magnetic braking is not the dominant spin-down mechanism.
Tidal effects are too weak to counteract accretion spin-up.
Hotspot formation causes significant mass loss during rapid transfer.
Abstract
During the mass-transfer phase in Algol systems, a large amount of mass and angular momentum are accreted by the gainer star which can be accelerated up to its critical Keplerian velocity. The fate of the gainer once it reaches this critical value is unclear. We investigate the orbital and stellar spin evolution in semi-detached binary systems, specifically for systems with rapidly rotating accretors. Our aim is to better distinguish between the different spin-down mechanisms proposed which can consistently explain the slow rotation observed in Algols' final states and assess the degree of non-conservatism due to the formation of a hotspot. We use our state-of-the-art binary evolution code, Binstar, which incorporates a detailed treatment of the orbital and stellar spin, including all torques due to mass transfer, the interactions between a star and its accretion disc, tidal effects and…
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