Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA.
Center for Computational Astrophysics, Flatiron Institute, New York, NY, USA.
Nature. 2018 Sep;561(7724):498-501. doi: 10.1038/s41586-018-0525-0. Epub 2018 Sep 26.
Luminous blue variables are massive, evolved stars that exhibit large variations in luminosity and size on timescales from months to years, with high associated rates of mass loss. In addition to this on-going variability, these stars exhibit outburst phases, during which their size increases and as a result their effective temperature decreases, typically to about 9,000 kelvin. Outbursts are believed to be caused by the radiation force on the cooler, more opaque, outer layers of the star balancing or even exceeding the force of gravity, although the exact mechanisms are unknown and cannot be determined using one-dimensional, spherically symmetric models of stars because such models cannot determine the physical processes that occur in this regime. Here we report three-dimensional simulations of massive, radiation-dominated stars, which show that helium opacity has an important role in triggering outbursts and setting the observed effective temperature during outbursts of about 9,000 kelvin. It probably also triggers the episodic mass loss at rates of 10 to 10 solar masses per year. The peak in helium opacity is evident in our three-dimensional simulations only because the density and temperature of the stellar envelope (the outer part of the star near the photosphere) need to be determined self-consistently with convection, which cannot be done in one-dimensional models that assume spherical symmetry. The simulations reproduce observations of long-timescale variability, and predict that convection causes irregular oscillations in the radii of the stars and variations in brightness of 10-30 per cent on a typical timescale of a few days. The amplitudes of these short-timescale variations are predicted to be even larger for cooler stars (in the outburst phase). This short-timescale variability should be observable with high-cadence observations.
变星是质量较大、已演化的恒星,其光度和大小会在数月至数年的时间内发生剧烈变化,同时伴随着较高的质量损失率。除了这种持续的可变性之外,这些恒星还会经历爆发阶段,在这个阶段,它们的大小会增加,因此有效温度会降低,通常会降低到约 9000 开尔文。据信,爆发是由恒星较冷、较不透明的外层的辐射力平衡甚至超过重力所致,尽管确切的机制尚不清楚,也无法使用恒星的一维、球对称模型来确定,因为这些模型无法确定在这个区域发生的物理过程。在这里,我们报告了对大质量、辐射主导的恒星的三维模拟,结果表明,氦的不透明度在触发爆发和确定约 9000 开尔文爆发期间的观测有效温度方面起着重要作用。它可能还以每年 10 到 10 个太阳质量的速率引发间歇性质量损失。氦不透明度的峰值在我们的三维模拟中很明显,这仅仅是因为恒星包层(接近光球的恒星外部)的密度和温度需要与对流一致地确定,而在假设球对称的一维模型中无法做到这一点。这些模拟再现了长时间尺度可变性的观测结果,并预测对流会导致恒星半径的不规则振荡以及亮度变化 10-30%,典型的时间尺度为几天。对于较冷的恒星(在爆发阶段),这些短时间尺度变化的幅度预计会更大。这种短时间尺度的可变性应该可以通过高时频观测来观测到。