Local Radiation Hydrodynamic Simulations of Massive Star Envelopes at the Iron Opacity Peak
Yan-Fei Jiang, Matteo Cantiello, Lars Bildsten, Eliot Quataert and, Omer Blaes

TL;DR
This study uses 3D radiation hydrodynamic simulations to explore the complex behavior of massive star envelopes at the iron opacity peak, revealing the interplay of convection, turbulence, and radiation in different regimes.
Contribution
It provides the first numerical calibration of turbulent energy transport in radiation-dominated stellar envelopes and elucidates the conditions affecting density inversions.
Findings
Convection reduces radiation acceleration when optical depth is high.
Turbulent velocities can exceed sound speed, causing shocks and density fluctuations.
Envelope oscillations may influence stellar spectral lines and mass loss.
Abstract
We perform three dimensional radiation hydrodynamic simulations of the structure and dynamics of radiation dominated envelopes of massive stars at the location of the iron opacity peak. One dimensional hydrostatic calculations predict an unstable density inversion at this location, whereas our simulations reveal a complex interplay of convective and radiative transport whose behavior depends on the ratio of the photon diffusion time to the dynamical time. The latter is set by the ratio of the optical depth per pressure scale height, , to , where 50 km/s is the isothermal sound speed in the gas alone. When , convection reduces the radiation acceleration and removes the density inversion. The turbulent energy transport in the simulations agrees with mixing length theory and provides its first numerical calibration in the radiation…
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