3D MHD astrospheres: applications to IRC-10414 and Betelgeuse
D. M.-A. Meyer (1), A. Mignone (2), M. Petrov (3), K. Scherer (4,5),, P. F. Velazquez (6), P. Boumis (7) ((1) Universitaat Potsdam, Institut fuer, Physik und Astronomie, Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 24/25, 14476 Potsdam, Germany

TL;DR
This paper presents 3D MHD simulations of astrospheres around runaway red supergiant stars, revealing how magnetic field orientation affects their stability and morphology, and successfully fitting observations of IRC-10414 and Betelgeuse.
Contribution
It introduces comprehensive 3D MHD models that incorporate magnetic field effects, improving understanding of astrosphere stability and morphology around massive stars.
Findings
Magnetic field orientation influences bow shock stability.
Simulations match observed astrosphere features of IRC-10414 and Betelgeuse.
Projection effects cause complex observed morphologies.
Abstract
A significative fraction of all massive stars in the Milky Way move supersonically through their local interstellar medium (ISM), producing bow shock nebulae by wind-ISM interaction. The stability of these observed astrospheres around cool massive stars challenges precedent two-dimensional (magneto-)hydrodynamical simulations of their surroundings. We present three-dimensional magneto-hydrodynamical (3D MHD) simulations of the circumstellar medium of runaway M-type red supergiant stars moving with velocity v_star= 50 km/s. We treat the stellar wind with a Parker spiral and assume a 7 microG magnetisation of the ISM. Our free parameter is the angle theta_mag between ISM flow and magnetisation, taken to 0, 45 and 90 degrees. It is found that simulation dimension, coordinate systems and grid effects can greatly affect the development of the modelled astrospheres. Nevertheless, as soon as…
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