Super-Eddington Stellar Winds Driven by Near-Surface Energy Deposition
Eliot Quataert, Rodrigo Fernandez, Daniel Kasen, Hannah Klion, and, Bill Paxton

TL;DR
This paper develops analytic and numerical models for super-Eddington stellar winds driven by near-surface energy deposition, explaining phenomena in luminous blue variables, supernova progenitors, and other explosive stellar events.
Contribution
It introduces a unified framework for understanding super-Eddington stellar winds, highlighting the role of energy deposition and the ratio of characteristic speeds in wind properties.
Findings
Wind kinetic power depends on energy deposition rate and escape velocity.
Photon luminosity can be super-Eddington but dominated by internal shocks.
Models agree with hydrodynamic simulations and explain observed stellar outflows.
Abstract
We develop analytic and numerical models of the properties of super-Eddington stellar winds, motivated by phases in stellar evolution when super-Eddington energy deposition (via, e.g., unstable fusion, wave heating, or a binary companion) heats a region near the stellar surface. This appears to occur in luminous blue variables (LBVs), Type IIn supernovae progenitors, classical novae, and X-ray bursts. We show that when the wind kinetic power exceeds Eddington, the photons are trapped and behave like a fluid. Convection does not play a significant role in the wind energy transport. The wind properties depend on the ratio of a characteristic speed in the problem vc ~ (Edot G)^{1/5} (where Edot is the heating rate) to the stellar escape speed near the heating region vesc(r_h). For vc > vesc(r_h) the wind kinetic power at large radii Edot_w ~ Edot. For vc < vesc(r_h), most of the energy is…
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