The consequences of structured flows continue to be a pressing topic in relating spectral data to physical processes occurring in massive star winds. In a preceding paper, our group reported on hydrodynamic simulations of hypersonic flow past a rigid spherical clump to explore the structure of bow shocks that can form around wind clumps. Here we report on profiles of emission lines that arise from such bow shock morphologies. To compute emission line profiles, we adopt a two-component flow structure of wind and clumps using two “beta” velocity laws. While individual bow shocks tend to generate double-horned emission line profiles, a group of bow shocks can lead to line profiles with a range of shapes with blueshifted peak emission that depe...
Massive stars drive powerful, supersonic winds via the radiative momentum associated with the therma...
Massive stars drive powerful, supersonic winds via the radiative momentum associated with the therma...
Context. The mass-loss rate is a key parameter of hot, massive stars. Small-scale inhomogeneities ...
The consequences of structured flows continue to be a pressing topic in relating spectral data to ph...
Clumped structures in wind flows have substantially altered our interpretations of multiwavelength d...
It is now well established that stellar winds of hot stars are fragmentary and that the X-ray emissi...
Motivated by recent detections by the XMM and Chandra satellites of X-ray line emission from hot, lu...
Context. Based on the multiphase hydrodynamical flows and the clump model, a two-fluid model of the ...
Clumps in hot star winds can originate from shock compression due to the line driven insta-bility. O...
One of the most intriguing spectral features of WR binary stars is the presence of time-dependent li...
It is commonly adopted that X-rays from O stars are produced deep inside the stellar wind, and trans...
The launch of high-spectral-resolution x-ray telescopes (Chandra, XMM) has provided a host of new sp...
We discuss X-ray line formation in dense O star winds. A random distribution of wind shocks is assu...
At least 5 per cent of the massive stars are moving supersonically through the interstellar medium (...
Massive stars drive powerful, supersonic winds via the radiative momentum associated with the therma...
Massive stars drive powerful, supersonic winds via the radiative momentum associated with the therma...
Context. The mass-loss rate is a key parameter of hot, massive stars. Small-scale inhomogeneities ...
The consequences of structured flows continue to be a pressing topic in relating spectral data to ph...
Clumped structures in wind flows have substantially altered our interpretations of multiwavelength d...
It is now well established that stellar winds of hot stars are fragmentary and that the X-ray emissi...
Motivated by recent detections by the XMM and Chandra satellites of X-ray line emission from hot, lu...
Context. Based on the multiphase hydrodynamical flows and the clump model, a two-fluid model of the ...
Clumps in hot star winds can originate from shock compression due to the line driven insta-bility. O...
One of the most intriguing spectral features of WR binary stars is the presence of time-dependent li...
It is commonly adopted that X-rays from O stars are produced deep inside the stellar wind, and trans...
The launch of high-spectral-resolution x-ray telescopes (Chandra, XMM) has provided a host of new sp...
We discuss X-ray line formation in dense O star winds. A random distribution of wind shocks is assu...
At least 5 per cent of the massive stars are moving supersonically through the interstellar medium (...
Massive stars drive powerful, supersonic winds via the radiative momentum associated with the therma...
Massive stars drive powerful, supersonic winds via the radiative momentum associated with the therma...
Context. The mass-loss rate is a key parameter of hot, massive stars. Small-scale inhomogeneities ...