Many massive stars travel through the interstellar medium at supersonic speeds. As a result they form bow shocks at the interface between the stellar wind. We use numerical hydrodynamics to reproduce such bow shocks numerically, creating models that can be compared to observations. In this paper we discuss the influence of two physical phenomena, interstellar magnetic fields and the presence of interstellar dust grains on the observable shape of the bow shocks of massive stars. We find that the interstellar magnetic field, though too weak to restrict the general shape of the bow shock, reduces the size of the instabilities that would otherwise be observed in the bow shock of a red supergiant. The interstellar dust grains, due to ...
Context. Many evolved stars travel through space at supersonic velocities, which leads to the format...
Observations obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope and the WISE satellite have reveale...
IRC-10414 is the twince star of Betelgeuse, as (i) they are both evolved massive stars in the cool r...
International audienceMany massive stars travel through the interstellar medium at supersonic speeds...
At least 5 per cent of the massive stars are moving supersonically through the interstellar medium (...
We study the hydrodynamical behavior occurring in the turbulent interaction zone of a fast-moving re...
A significant fraction of OB-type, main-sequence massive stars are classified as runaway and move su...
International audienceMassive stars that have been ejected from their parent cluster and supersonica...
We study the hydrodynamical behavior occurring in the turbulent interaction zone of a fast-moving re...
Aims. Our goal is to study the different morphologies associated to the interaction of the stellar ...
A number of high velocity O stars have associated parsec-sized structure visible in the IRAS infrare...
The circumstellar medium around massive stars is strongly impacted by stellar winds, radiation, and ...
International audienceContext. The interstellar bubble RCW 120 seen around a type O runaway star is ...
Context. Many evolved stars travel through space at supersonic velocities, which leads to the format...
Observations obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope and the WISE satellite have reveale...
IRC-10414 is the twince star of Betelgeuse, as (i) they are both evolved massive stars in the cool r...
International audienceMany massive stars travel through the interstellar medium at supersonic speeds...
At least 5 per cent of the massive stars are moving supersonically through the interstellar medium (...
We study the hydrodynamical behavior occurring in the turbulent interaction zone of a fast-moving re...
A significant fraction of OB-type, main-sequence massive stars are classified as runaway and move su...
International audienceMassive stars that have been ejected from their parent cluster and supersonica...
We study the hydrodynamical behavior occurring in the turbulent interaction zone of a fast-moving re...
Aims. Our goal is to study the different morphologies associated to the interaction of the stellar ...
A number of high velocity O stars have associated parsec-sized structure visible in the IRAS infrare...
The circumstellar medium around massive stars is strongly impacted by stellar winds, radiation, and ...
International audienceContext. The interstellar bubble RCW 120 seen around a type O runaway star is ...
Context. Many evolved stars travel through space at supersonic velocities, which leads to the format...
Observations obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope and the WISE satellite have reveale...
IRC-10414 is the twince star of Betelgeuse, as (i) they are both evolved massive stars in the cool r...