SIMBAD references

2019A&A...625A...4G - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 625A, 4-4 (2019/5-1)

Thermal emission from bow shocks. I. 2D hydrodynamic models of the Bubble Nebula.

GREEN S., MACKEY J., HAWORTH T.J., GVARAMADZE V.V. and DUFFY P.

Abstract (from CDS):

The Bubble Nebula (or NGC 7635) is a parsec-scale seemingly spherical wind-blown bubble around the relatively unevolved O star BD+60°2522. The young dynamical age of the nebula and significant space velocity of the star suggest that the Bubble Nebula might be a bow shock. We ran 2D hydrodynamic simulations to model the interaction of the wind of the central star with the interstellar medium (ISM). The models cover a range of possible ISM number densities of n=50-200cm–3 and stellar velocities of v*=20-40km/s. Synthetic Hα and 24 µm emission maps predict the same apparent spherical bubble shape with quantitative properties similar to observations. The synthetic maps also predict a maximum brightness similar to that from the observations and agree that the maximum brightness is at the apex of the bow shock. The best-matching simulation had v*~=20km/s into an ISM with n∼100cm–3, at an angle of 60° with respect to the line of sight. Synthetic maps of soft (0.3-2keV) and hard (2-10keV) X-ray emission show that the brightest region is in the wake behind the star and not at the bow shock itself. The unabsorbed soft X-rays have a luminosity of ∼1032-1033erg/s. The hard X-rays are fainter: ∼1030-1031erg/s, and may be too faint for current X-ray instruments to successfully observe. Our results imply that the O star creates a bow shock as it moves through the ISM and in turn creates an asymmetric bubble visible at optical and infrared wavelengths and predicted to be visible in X-rays. The Bubble Nebula does not appear to be unique; it could simply be a favourably oriented, very dense bow shock. The dense ISM surrounding BD+60°2522 and its strong wind suggest that it could be a good candidate for detecting non-thermal emission.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO 2019

Journal keyword(s): hydrodynamics - instabilities - radiative transfer - methods: numerical - stars: winds - outflows - ISM: bubbles

Simbad objects: 5

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