Gone with the wind: the impact of wind mass transfer on the orbital evolution of AGB binary systems
M. I. Saladino, O. R. Pols, E. van der Helm, I. Pelupessy, S., Portegies Zwart

TL;DR
This study uses 3D hydrodynamical simulations to analyze how wind mass transfer affects the orbital evolution of AGB binary systems, revealing conditions that lead to orbit expansion or shrinkage.
Contribution
It provides a detailed model linking wind velocity ratios to orbital changes, improving predictions of binary evolution post-AGB.
Findings
High wind velocities lead to orbit expansion.
Low wind velocities can cause orbit shrinkage.
Angular momentum transfer occurs within a few orbital separations.
Abstract
In low-mass binary systems, mass transfer is likely to occur via a slow and dense stellar wind when one of the stars is in the AGB phase. Observations show that many binaries that have undergone AGB mass transfer have orbital periods of 1-10 yr, at odds with the predictions of binary population synthesis models. We investigate the mass-accretion efficiency and angular-momentum loss via wind mass transfer in AGB binary systems. We use these quantities to predict the evolution of the orbit. We perform 3D hydrodynamical simulations of the stellar wind lost by an AGB star using the AMUSE framework. We approximate the thermal evolution of the gas by imposing a simple effective cooling balance and we vary the orbital separation and the velocity of the stellar wind. We find that for wind velocities larger than the relative orbital velocity of the system the flow…
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