Subsonic structure and optically thick winds from Wolf--Rayet stars
Luca Grassitelli, Norbert Langer, Nathan J. Grin, Jonathan Mackey,, Joachim M. Bestenlehner, Goetz Graefener

TL;DR
This paper models the subsonic regions of Wolf-Rayet star winds, revealing how radiative forces at opacity bumps drive supersonic outflows and constraining wind properties through a new Sonic HR diagram.
Contribution
It introduces a 1D hydrodynamic model focusing on the sonic point, establishing conditions for wind acceleration and a Sonic HR diagram to relate observable parameters.
Findings
Winds are accelerated by Fe and HeII opacity bumps.
Subsonic conditions are independent of the supersonic flow details.
A minimum mass-loss rate for transonic flow driven by Fe opacity is derived.
Abstract
Wolf-Rayet star's winds can be so dense and so optically thick that the photosphere appears in the highly supersonic part of the outflow, veiling the underlying subsonic part of the star, and leaving the initial acceleration of the wind inaccessible to observations. We investigate the conditions and the structure of the subsonic part of the outflow of Galactic WR stars, in particular of the WNE subclass; our focus is on the conditions at the sonic point. We compute 1D hydrodynamic stellar structure models for massive helium stars adopting outer boundaries at the sonic point. We find that the outflows of our models are accelerated to supersonic velocities by the radiative force from opacity bumps either at temperatures of the order of 200kK by the Fe opacity bump or of the order of 50kK by the HeII opacity bump. For a given mass-loss rate, the conditions in the subsonic part of the…
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