Wind bubbles within H II regions around slowly moving stars
Jonathan Mackey, Vasilii V. Gvaramadze, Shazrene Mohamed, Norbert, Langer

TL;DR
This study uses radiation-hydrodynamics simulations to explore wind bubbles and H II region morphology around slowly moving massive stars, revealing their aspherical nature, limited filling factors, and implications for star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulations of wind bubbles around moving stars within H II regions, highlighting their aspherical shape and limited impact on ionization fronts.
Findings
Wind bubbles are highly aspherical from birth.
Wind bubbles fill only 10-20% of H II regions.
Stellar motion <=4 km/s is consistent with observations.
Abstract
Interstellar bubbles around O stars are driven by a combination of the star's wind and ionizing radiation output. The wind contribution is uncertain because the boundary between the wind and interstellar medium is difficult to observe. Mid-infrared observations (e.g., of the H II region RCW 120) show arcs of dust emission around O stars, contained well within the H II region bubble. These arcs could indicate the edge of an asymmetric stellar wind bubble, distorted by density gradients and/or stellar motion. We present two-dimensional, radiation-hydrodynamics simulations investigating the evolution of wind bubbles and H II regions around massive stars moving through a dense (n=3000 cm^{-3}), uniform medium with velocities ranging from 4 to 16 km/s. The H II region morphology is strongly affected by stellar motion, as expected, but the wind bubble is also very aspherical from birth, even…
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