YSO accretion shocks: magnetic, chromospheric or stochastic flow effects can suppress fluctuations of X-ray emission
T. Matsakos, J.-P. Chi\`eze, C. Stehl\'e, M. Gonz\'alez, L. Ibgui, L., de S\'a, T. Lanz, S. Orlando, R. Bonito, C. Argiroffi, F. Reale, G. Peres

TL;DR
This study uses 2D magneto-hydrodynamical simulations to show that magnetic field strength and perturbations in young star accretion shocks can suppress expected X-ray emission oscillations, explaining observational discrepancies.
Contribution
It demonstrates how magnetic field strength and realistic perturbations influence shock structure and emission variability in young stellar objects.
Findings
Weak magnetic fields lead to chaotic post-shock regions with global periodicity.
Strong magnetic fields confine plasma into fibrils with independent oscillations.
Perturbations can suppress periodic emission by desynchronizing fibril oscillations.
Abstract
Context. Theoretical arguments and numerical simulations of radiative shocks produced by the impact of the accreting gas onto young stars predict quasi-periodic oscillations in the emitted radiation. However, observational data do not show evidence of such periodicity. Aims. We investigate whether physically plausible perturbations in the accretion column or in the chromosphere could disrupt the shock structure influencing the observability of the oscillatory behavior. Methods. We performed local 2D magneto-hydrodynamical simulations of an accretion shock impacting a chromosphere, taking optically thin radiation losses and thermal conduction into account. We investigated the effects of several perturbation types, such as clumps in the accretion stream or chromospheric fluctuations, and also explored a wide range of plasma-\beta values. Results. In the case of a weak magnetic field, the…
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