X-ray emission of massive stars and their winds
Gregor Rauw

TL;DR
This paper reviews the X-ray emission characteristics of massive stars, exploring how stellar winds, magnetic fields, and binary interactions influence their X-ray properties and variability.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive synthesis of observational findings and theoretical models explaining X-ray emission mechanisms in various types of massive stars.
Findings
X-ray luminosity scales with bolometric luminosity in OB stars.
Magnetic OB stars show rotation-modulated X-ray emission explained by magnetically confined wind shock models.
Gamma Cas stars exhibit hard, variable X-ray emission with unresolved origins.
Abstract
Most types of massive stars display X-ray emission that is affected by the properties of their stellar winds. Single non-magnetic OB stars have an X-ray luminosity that scales with their bolometric luminosity and their emission is thought to arise from a distribution of wind-embedded shocks. The lack of significant short-term stochastic variability indicates that the winds consist of a large number of independent fragments. Detailed variability studies unveiled a connection between the photosphere and the wind: well-studied O-type stars exhibit a ~ 10% modulation of their emission on timescales consistent with the rotation period, and a few early B-type pulsators display ~ 10% modulations of their X-ray flux with the pulsation period. Unlike OB stars, their evolved descendants (WR and LBV stars) lack a well-defined relation between their X-ray and bolometric luminosities, and several…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
