Laboratory analogue of a supersonic accretion column in a binary star system
Abstract
Astrophysical flows exhibit rich behaviour resulting from the interplay of different forms of energy--gravitational, thermal, magnetic and radiative. For magnetic cataclysmic variable stars, material from a late, main sequence star is pulled onto a highly magnetized (B>10 MG) white dwarf. The magnetic field is sufficiently large to direct the flow as an accretion column onto the poles of the white dwarf, a star subclass known as AM Herculis. A stationary radiative shock is expected to form 100-1,000 km above the surface of the white dwarf, far too small to be resolved with current telescopes. Here we report the results of a laboratory experiment showing the evolution of a reverse shock when both ionization and radiative losses are important. We find that the stand-off position of the shock agrees with radiation hydrodynamic simulations and is consistent, when scaled to AM Herculis star systems, with theoretical predictions.
- Publication:
-
Nature Communications
- Pub Date:
- June 2016
- DOI:
- 10.1038/ncomms11899
- Bibcode:
- 2016NatCo...711899C