Accretion onto magnetized neutron stars: structure and interchange instability of a model magnetosphere.
Abstract
A self-consistent model is analyzed for the spherical infall of weakly magnetized plasma into the magnetosphere of a slowly rotating, strongly magnetized neutron star. It is shown that spherical infall is probably a good approximation for X-ray sources which accrete from a stellar wind. The location of the standoff shock which halts the hypersonic infall is estimated along with the emission from the shocked layer. The location of the equilibrium magnetopause and the structure of the magnetic field within it are calculated; it is found that the magnetic poles are true cusps and that the entry of gas due to equilibrium flow across a cusp is almost certainly dominated by the interchange instability near the magnetic equator. The energy principle is applied to derive necessary conditions for the occurrence of this instability. The results indicate that the strong magnetic-pressure gradient stabilizes the gas unless moderately strong radiative cooling takes place and that the cooled plasma enters the magnetosphere as long filaments capable of moving between field lines. The rate at which the equilibrium magnetopause can 'absorb' mass and momentum is derived, the validity of the approximations employed is discussed, and the likely evolution of the sinking filaments is outlined to show that the spatial distribution of the plasma is determined mainly by the dynamics and thermodynamics of the filaments rather than the magnetic-field structure.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- August 1976
- DOI:
- 10.1086/154562
- Bibcode:
- 1976ApJ...207..914A
- Keywords:
-
- Binary Stars;
- Magnetic Stars;
- Magnetospheric Instability;
- Mass Transfer;
- Neutron Stars;
- Stellar Atmospheres;
- Stellar Magnetospheres;
- Atmospheric Models;
- Magnetohydrodynamic Flow;
- Radiative Transfer;
- Self Consistent Fields;
- Stellar Rotation;
- Stellar Winds;
- X Ray Sources;
- Astrophysics