Supercritical colliding wind binaries
L. Abaroa, G.E. Romero, P. Sotomayor

TL;DR
This paper investigates supercritical colliding wind binaries involving superaccreting black holes, demonstrating their potential to accelerate particles and produce nonthermal radiation across a broad spectrum from radio to gamma rays.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of supercritical colliding wind binaries and models their particle acceleration and nonthermal emission, expanding understanding of high-energy processes in such extreme systems.
Findings
Wind interactions produce nonthermal emission from radio to tens of GeV.
Luminosities range from 10^{33} to 10^{35} erg/s.
Systems can accelerate cosmic rays and emit across the electromagnetic spectrum.
Abstract
Context. Particle-accelerating colliding-wind binaries (PACWBs) are systems that are formed by two massive and hot stars and produce nonthermal (NT) radiation. The key elements of these systems are fast winds and the shocks that they create when they collide. Binaries with nonaccreting young pulsars have also been detected as NT emitters, again as a consequence of the wind-wind interaction. Black holes (BHs) might produce NT radiation by this mechanism if they accrete at super-Eddington rates. In such cases, the disk is expected to launch a radiation-driven wind, and if this wind has an equatorial component, it can collide with the companion star yielding a PACWB. These systems are supercritical colliding wind binaries (SCWBs). Aims. We aim to characterize the particle acceleration and NT radiation produced by the collision of winds in binary systems composed of a superaccreting BH…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
