Brought to you by:

Hydrodynamics of the Stream-Disk Impact in Interacting Binaries

and

© 1998. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Philip J. Armitage and Mario Livio 1998 ApJ 493 898 DOI 10.1086/305149

0004-637X/493/2/898

Abstract

We use hydrodynamic simulations to provide quantitative estimates of the effects of the impact of the accretion stream on disks in interacting binaries. For low accretion rates, efficient radiative cooling of the hotspot region can occur, and the primary consequence of the stream impact is stream overflow toward smaller disk radii. The stream is well described by a ballistic trajectory, but larger masses of gas are swept up and overflow at smaller, but still highly supersonic, velocities. If cooling is inefficient, overflow still occurs, but there is no coherent stream inward of the disk rim. Qualitatively, the resulting structure appears as a bulge extending downstream along the disk rim. We calculate the mass fraction and velocity of the overflowing component as a function of the important system parameters, and discuss the implications of the results for X-ray observations and Doppler tomography of cataclysmic variables, low-mass X-ray binaries, and supersoft X-ray sources.

Export citation and abstract BibTeX RIS

Please wait… references are loading.
10.1086/305149