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1
A few basic concepts of binary stellar evolution
F. D'Antona
INAF, Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma
XI Advanced School of Astrophysics, Brazil, 1-6
September 2002
2
Summary
  • Fundamentals of binary evolution
  • Roche lobe and mass transfer
  • Timescales of mass transfer
  • Role of angular momentum losses
  • Onset of mass transfer in the case of
    iradiation and its influence on low mass Xray
    binary secular evolution
  • Pulsars and the spin-up phase
  • Modalities of mass transfer towards neutron
    stars

3
Timescales relevant to evolution
  • Nuclear tn
  • Thermal tKH GM2/RL
  • Dynamical td (2R3/GM)1/2
  • For stars it is generally
  • t d ltlt t KH ltlt t n
  • Binary evolution depends on the relation of these
    quantities with the mass loss timescale
  • t mdot M/Mdot

4
The Eddington limit to mass accretion
The limiting luminosity which can be produced by
accretion is self-limited by a feedback
mechanism namly by the pressure exerted from the
radiation produced by accretion against the
gravity of the falling matter
5
Roche lobe geometry
-GM1/(r1RL1)2 GM2/(r2-RL1) 2W2RL10
(reference frame with origin in the mass center,
corotating with the system at velocity W2 p
/Porb). RL1 is the distance of L1 from the CM
Roche lobe The smallest closed equipotential
surface containing both objects
6
Approximate expressions
7
Definition of Roche lobe radius
It is the radius of the sphere which has the same
volume as the Roche lobe of the star. For the
secondary component in a binary in which
qM2/M1lt0.8 (from Paczynski 1971)
In binary computations, we use spherical stars,
so the evolution is followed by requiring a
comparison between stellar radius and Roche lobe
radius
8
Total mass and angular momentum evolution
If M2/M1lt1, the orbital separation a increases
with mass transfer. In cases of unevolved mass
losing components (e.g. CVs) this implies that
the orbital angular momentum can not be constant
Gravitational radiation (Landau Lifshitz 58
Magnetic braking (Verbunt Zwaan 81)
9
Standard evolution driven by AML cataclysmic
binaries
the secondary quasi-MS star evolves first down
along the MS, then its radius becomes larger than
the MS radius, when tKHtmdot . Finally the
degenerate sequence is reached and the period
increases again. Pmin80m if GR operates
10
Porb- Mdot evolution in CVs
M11.4Mo M20.8Mo f_VZ0.7 JMB0 when M2 becomes
fully convective M2 recovers thermal equilibrium
and a Period Gap is established
Secular evolution from long to short periods
11
Low mass X ray binaries secular evolution
WARNING The orbital periods and type of
secondary components are similar to those of CVs,
so the first idea is that they evolve similarly,
through loss or orbital angular momentum, from
long to short periods. Actually this is probably
not true!
12
Evolution with mass transfer
If R2ltR 2,R, no mass transfer. Simplest
prescription R2,R2,R, enforced in the structure
computations. This allows to follow stationary
mass transfer phases. Second approximation
Lubow and Shu 1975 subsonical and isothermal
mass flow in optically thin layers, reaching
sound velocity at L1, or adiabatic in optically
thick layers
13
Non stationary mass transfer formulation
Hp 10 4 R2 for low mass stars thus the Mdot
is a sensitive function of R2R- R2 R2 must be
computed with care
14
Stability of mass transfer
15
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16
Tells which are the system angular momentum
primary losses
Includes all the terms nuclear
expansion, thermal relaxation, illumination
The denominator terms can enhance Mdot by
destabilizing it
17
The mass transfer with irradiation
In some important cases, the secondary star is
immerged in the radiation field of the primary
and this produces an effect on its radius
derivative
R2 is lt RRL
LirrLx in Xray binaries LirrL(pulsar) in MSPs
heating luminosity Fraction of Lirr impinging
The secondary star
f possible screening factor
18
The reaction of convective stars to mass loss
If LhgtLnuc the radiation field shields the star
and does not allow to the nuclearly energy
generated luminosity to freely escape from the
surface. If the star has a convective envelope,
it expands on the thermal timescale at its bottom
Although the long term effect of illumination is
not easy to be understood, the short term effect
on the onset of mass transfer is clear mass
transfer is enhanced
19
The onset of mass transfer in Xray binaries
Mass transfer due to AML begins, with a given Mdot
Lh0.03Lx shields the secondary star, causing a
radius increase
Mdot increases
Runaway? Limitation in Mdot comes from
the thermal relaxation of the star
20
Effect of irradiation on the onset of mass
transfer
M20.8Mo in main sequence Full line with
irradiation Dotted standard evolution
21
Acceleration of mass transfer when illumination
is present
22
Onset of mass transfer with irradiation
23
Mass transfer with irradiation will be subject
to instability
If, for any reason, there is a shielding of Lx,
so that Lh decreases, the radius of the secondary
will tend to decrease, Mdot will decrease and,
this time, this is a runaway situation and the
system detaches
The system comes back again to a semidetached
stage, but this will occur on the timescale of
the systemic AM losses detached phases may be
much longer than mass transfer phases
24
Standard Evolution compared to irradiation
Green CV type evolution
Yellow irradiated evolution
Porb increases Mdot is 10-100 times larger
25
How irradiation helps in X-ray binaries
  • The orbital period increases as observed
  • The mass loss rate is larger
  • The number ratio LMXB/MSPs is more reasonable
  • The system evolves through alternated high Mdot
    phases and detached phases which may help in
    explaining why radio MSPs do not accrete too much
    mass (see later)

26
Disc Magnetic Field Interaction
Magnetic Pressure Proportional to B2
27
Pulsars spin up
The accreting matter transfers its specific
angular momentum (the Keplerian AM at the
magnetospheric radius) to the neutron
star L(GmRm)1/2
The process goes on until the pulsar reaches the
keplerian velocity at Rm (equilibrium period)
The conservation of AM tells us how much mass is
necesssary to reach Peq starting from a
non-rotating NS. A trivial approximation gives
0.9Msun
28
Pulsar power
The energy lost in electromagnetic radiation and
in the relastivistic particle beam comes from the
rotational energy of the pulsar, which slows down
allows to derive m B108Gauss for MSPs
29
Accretion conditions 1
(Illarionov Sunyaev 1975)
.
M
Accretion regime R(m) lt R(cor)
  • accretion onto NS surface (magnetic poles)
  • energy release LGMM(dot)/R

R(m) f RA, f 1
30
Accretion conditions 2
Propeller regime R(cor) lt R(m) lt R(lc)
.
M
  • centrifugal barrier closes (B-field drag
    stronger than gravity)
  • matter accumulates or is ejected from R(m)
  • accretion onto R(m) lower gravitational energy
    released

31
Accretion conditions 3
Radio Pulsar regime R(m) gt R(lc)
.
M
  • no accretion
  • disk matter swept away
  • by pulsar wind and pressure

32
We have set the stage!
In the following, we can talk about the MSP
population of globular clusters. Then we go back
to our favourite globular cluster and show that
it harbors the most incredible pulsar, an MSP in
an interacting binary
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