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P113 |
September 2007
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To be published in:
Astronomy and Astrophysics Reviews
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Non-thermal emission processes in massive binaries+
M. De Becker1,*
1 Institut d'Astrophysique et de Géophysique - Université de Liège, Allée du 6 Août, Bât B5c, B-4000 Liège (Sart Tilman), Belgium
* Postdoctoral Researcher FNRS, Belgium
+ The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com/content/9861781052868548
In this paper, I present a general discussion of several astrophysical
processes likely to play a role in the production of non-thermal emission
in massive stars, with emphasis on massive binaries. Even though the
discussion will start in the radio domain where the non-thermal emission
was first detected, the census of physical processes involved in the
non-thermal emission from massive stars shows that many spectral domains
are concerned, from the radio to the very high energies. First, the
theoretical aspects of the non-thermal emission from early-type stars will
be addressed. The main topics that will be discussed are respectively the
physics of individual stellar winds and their interaction in binary systems,
the acceleration of relativistic electrons, the magnetic field of massive
stars, and finally the non-thermal emission processes relevant to the case
of massive stars. Second, this general qualitative discussion will be
followed by a more quantitative one, devoted to the most probable scenario
where non-thermal radio emitters are massive binaries. I will show how
several stellar, wind and orbital parameters can be combined in order to
make some semi-quantitative predictions on the high-energy counterpart to
the non-thermal emission detected in the radio domain. These theoretical
considerations will be followed by a census of results obtained so far,
and related to this topic. These results concern the radio, the visible,
the X-ray and the gamma-ray domains. Prospects for the very high energy
gamma-ray emission from massive stars will also be addressed. Two
particularly interesting examples -- one O-type and one Wolf-Rayet binary --
will be considered in details. Finally, strategies for future developments
in this field will be discussed.
Radiation mechanisms: non-thermal -- Stars: early-type -- Stars: binaries: general -- Radio continuum: stars -- X-rays: stars -- Gamma rays: theory
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