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A&A 388, L20-L23 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020583
Letter
The dominant X-ray wind in massive star binaries
J. M. Pittard1 and I. R. Stevens21 Department of Physics & Astronomy, The University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK
2 Department of Physics & Astronomy, The University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK
(Received 8 March 2002 / Accepted 12 April 2002 )
Abstract
We investigate which shocked wind is responsible for the
majority of the X-ray emission in colliding wind binaries, an issue
where there is some confusion in the literature, and which we show is
more complicated than has been assumed. We find that where both winds
rapidly cool (typically close binaries), the ratio of the wind speeds
is often more important than the momentum ratio, because it controls the
energy flux ratio, and the faster wind is generally the dominant emitter.
When both winds are largely adiabatic (typically long-period binaries), the
slower and denser wind will cool faster and the stronger wind generally
dominates the X-ray luminosity.
Key words: stars: binaries: general -- stars: early-type -- stars: Wolf-Rayet -- X-rays: stars
Offprint request: J. M. Pittard, jmp@ast.leeds.ac.uk
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