Determining mass accretion and jet mass-loss rates in post-asymptotic giant branch binary systems
Dylan Bollen, Devika Kamath, Orsola De Marco, Hans Van Winckel, and, Mark Wardle

TL;DR
This study models jets from post-AGB binary stars to determine their morphology, density, and mass-loss rates, revealing the circumbinary disk as the primary source of accretion and jet fueling.
Contribution
First detailed spatio-kinematic and radiative transfer modeling of jets in post-AGB binaries to quantify mass-loss and accretion rates.
Findings
Jets have mass-loss rates of 10^-7 to 10^-5 M_sol/yr.
Mass accretion rates onto companions are 10^-6 to 10^-4 M_sol/yr.
Circumbinary disks likely feed the circum-companion accretion disks.
Abstract
Aims. In this study, we determine the morphology and mass-loss rate of jets emanating from the companion in post-asymptotic giant branch (post-AGB) binary stars with a circumbinary disk. In doing so, we also determine the mass accretion rates on to the companion and investigate the source feeding the circum-companion accretion disk. Methods. We perform a spatio-kinematic modelling of the jet of two well-sampled post-AGB binaries, BD+46442 and IRAS19135+3937, by fitting the orbital phased time series of H-alpha spectra. Once the jet geometry, velocity and scaled density structure are computed, we carry out radiative transfer modelling of the jet for the first four Balmer lines to determine the jet densities, thus allowing us to compute the jet mass-loss rates and mass accretion rates. Results. The spatio-kinematic model of the jet reproduces the observed absorption feature in the H-alpha…
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