Rapid binary mass transfer: Circumbinary outflows and angular momentum losses
Peter Scherbak, Wenbin Lu, Jim Fuller

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to analyze mass and angular momentum loss via circumbinary outflows during rapid binary mass transfer, revealing how outflow properties depend on binary mass ratios.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the angular momentum and mass loss mechanisms in binary systems during rapid mass transfer, focusing on circumbinary outflows and their dependence on binary parameters.
Findings
Outflows are concentrated near the equator with a wind-like density profile.
The specific angular momentum of outflowing gas decreases with increasing mass ratio.
Outflow velocities are about 10-20% of the binary orbital velocity, varying with mass ratio.
Abstract
High rates of stable mass transfer likely occur for some binary star systems, but the resulting flow of mass and angular momentum (AM) is unclear. We perform hydrodynamical simulations of a polytropic donor star and a point mass secondary to determine the mass, AM, and velocity of gas that escapes the system, and the dependence on binary parameters such as mass ratio. The simulations use an adiabatic equation of state and do not include any radiative cooling or irradiation of the outflow. Mass transfer is initiated by injecting heat into the stellar envelope, causing it to gradually inflate and overflow its Roche lobe. The transferred mass flows into an accretion disk, but soon begins to escape through the outer Lagrange point (L2), with a lesser amount escaping through the L3 point. This creates an equatorially concentrated circumbinary outflow with an opening angle of 10 to 30 degrees…
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