Dynamical Effects of Colliding Outflows in Binary Systems
Abstract
The outflow of an object traveling in a fluid can shape the fluid morphology by forming a forward bow shock that accelerates the object via gravitational feedback. This dynamical effect, namely, dynamical antifriction, has been studied in idealized infinite uniform media, which suffers from the convergence problem due to the long-range nature of gravitation. In this work, we conduct global 3D hydrodynamic simulations to study this effect in the scenario of a binary system, where the collision of outflows from both stars creates a suitable configuration. We demonstrate with simulations that a dense and slow outflow can give rise to a positive torque on the binary and lead to the expansion of the orbit. As an application, we show that binaries consisting of an AGB star and an outflowing pulsar can experience ~10% orbital expansion during the AGB stage, in addition to the contribution from mass loss. We also prove that the gravitational force drops as O(r -3) from the center of mass in the binary scenarios, which guarantees a quick converge of the overall effect.
Type
Publication
The Astrophysical Journal

Authors
Assistant Professor
Xinyu Li is an assistant professor in the Department of Astronomy, Tsinghua University. He is fond of discovering fundamental physical laws from the vast observation of various astrophysical objects. His research areas are high energy astrophysics, plasma astrophysics and cosmology. His research topics cover a broad range of physical scales: from the smallest fundamental particles like electrons and ultralight axions, to neutron stars, black holes and galaxies, and to the largest scale structure of the universe.