Induced differential rotation and mixing in asynchronous binary stars
Gloria Koenigsberger, Edmundo Moreno, and Norbert Langer

TL;DR
This paper presents a new method to analyze the complex, time-variable differential rotation in asynchronously rotating binary stars, revealing how tidal forces influence internal mixing and surface chemical distributions.
Contribution
It introduces a 3D modeling approach to explore the rotation structure of asynchronous binaries and discusses implications for stellar mixing and surface abundances.
Findings
Differential rotation depends on departure from synchronicity.
Eccentric systems show orbital-phase-dependent rotation changes.
Asynchronous binaries may have more efficient mixing than synchronized ones.
Abstract
Rotation contributes to internal mixing processes and observed variability in massive stars. A significant number of binary stars are not in strict synchronous rotation, including all eccentric systems. This leads to a tidally induced and time-variable differential rotation structure. We present a method for exploring the rotation structure of asynchronously rotating binaries. We solve the equations of motion of a 3D grid of volume elements located above the rigidly rotating core in the presence of gravitational, centrifugal, Coriolis, gas pressure and viscous forces to obtain the angular velocity as a function of the three spatial coordinates and time. We find that the induced rotation structure and its temporal variability depend on the degree of departure from synchronicity. In eccentric systems, the structure changes over the orbital cycle with maximum amplitudes occurring…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
