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On the Weak-Wind Problem in Massive Stars: X-ray Spectra Reveal a Massive Hot Wind in μ\ Columbae

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arxiv 1208.0820 v1 pith:FUIS2WDP submitted 2012-08-03 astro-ph.SR

On the Weak-Wind Problem in Massive Stars: X-ray Spectra Reveal a Massive Hot Wind in μ\ Columbae

classification astro-ph.SR
keywords windweak-windx-rayemissionmassivespectraspectrumstars
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\mu\ Columbae is a prototypical weak-wind O-star for which we have obtained a high-resolution X-ray spectrum with the Chandra LETG/ACIS-S instrument and a low resolution spectrum with Suzaku. This allows us, for the first time, to investigate the role of X-rays on the wind structure in a bona fide weak-wind system and to determine whether there actually is a massive, hot wind. The X-ray emission measure indicates that the outflow is an order of magnitude greater than that derived from UV lines and is commensurate with the nominal wind-luminosity relationship for O-stars. Therefore, the ``weak-wind problem''---identified from cool wind UV/optical spectra---is largely resolved by accounting for the hot wind seen in X-rays. From X-ray line profiles, Doppler shifts, and relative strengths, we find that this weak-wind star is typical of other late O dwarfs. The X-ray spectra do not suggest a magnetically confined plasma---the spectrum is soft and lines are broadened; Suzaku spectra confirm the lack of emission above 2 keV. Nor do the relative line shifts and widths suggest any wind decoupling by ions. The He-like triplets indicate that the bulk of the X-ray emission is formed rather close to the star, within 5 stellar radii. Our results challenge the idea that some OB stars are ``weak-wind'' stars that deviate from the standard wind-luminosity relationship. The wind is not weak, but it is hot and its bulk is only detectable in X-rays.

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  1. Stellar winds of O-type stars traced by high ionization fine-structure emission lines with JWST/MIRI

    astro-ph.SR 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 7.0

    JWST/MIRI detects [Ne V] 14.3 micron emission from O-star winds in 5 of 22 observed stars, enabling wind speed and mass-loss rate estimates even in weak-wind regimes.