Stellar Winds on the Main-Sequence I: Wind Model
C. P. Johnstone, M. G\"udel, T. L\"uftinger, G. Toth, I. Brott

TL;DR
This paper develops a hydrodynamic model to estimate stellar wind properties for low-mass main-sequence stars, exploring how these winds depend on stellar mass, radius, and rotation, with two different temperature scaling assumptions.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive grid of wind models for stars between 0.4 and 1.1 solar masses, comparing two methods for scaling wind temperature and providing practical application instructions.
Findings
Model accurately describes solar wind far from the Sun
Wind properties vary with stellar mass and rotation
Uncertainty remains in wind temperature scaling methods
Abstract
Aims: We develop a method for estimating the properties of stellar winds for low-mass main-sequence stars between masses of 0.4 and 1.1 solar masses at a range of distances from the star. Methods: We use 1D thermal pressure driven hydrodynamic wind models run using the Versatile Advection Code. Using in situ measurements of the solar wind, we produce models for the slow and fast components of the solar wind. We consider two radically different methods for scaling the base temperature of the wind to other stars: in Model A, we assume that wind temperatures are fundamentally linked to coronal temperatures, and in Model B, we assume that the sound speed at the base of the wind is a fixed fraction of the escape velocity. In Paper II of this series, we use observationally constrained rotational evolution models to derive wind mass loss rates. Results: Our model for the solar wind…
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