On the Fast Magnetic Rotator Regime of Stellar Winds
C. P. Johnstone

TL;DR
This study investigates the transition to the fast magnetic rotator regime in stellar winds of low mass stars, highlighting the impact of magneto-centrifugal forces and wind temperature scaling on wind speeds and mass loss rates.
Contribution
It extends solar wind models to 1D MHD simulations for rotating stars, exploring how wind temperature assumptions affect mass loss rate predictions in rapid rotators.
Findings
Winds can reach several thousand km/s for 1.0 Msun stars.
Magneto-centrifugal effects are weaker in lower mass stars.
Assumptions on wind temperature scaling significantly influence mass loss rate predictions.
Abstract
Aims: We study the acceleration of the stellar winds of rapidly rotating low mass stars and the transition between the slow magnetic rotator and fast magnetic rotator regimes. We aim to understand the properties of stellar winds in the fast magnetic rotator regime and the effects of magneto-centrifugal forces on wind speeds and mass loss rates. Methods: We extend the solar wind model of Johnstone et al. (2015b) to 1D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations of the winds of rotating stars. We test two assumptions for how to scale the wind temperature to other stars and assume the mass loss rate scales as Mdot ~ Rstar^2 OmegaStar^1.33 Mstar^-3.36, in the unsaturated regime, as estimated by Johnstone et al. (2015a). Results: For 1.0 Msun stars, the winds can be accelerated to several thousand km/s, and the effects of magneto-centrifugal forces are much weaker for lower mass stars. We find…
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