posted on 2015-12-08, 14:27authored byHastyar Omar Mohammed
This thesis work is concerned with the accretion processes and flow structures associated
with stellar winds in binary systems. I study mass transfer via stellar wind capture
in symbiotic recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi, using Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics. I
investigate the modes of mass transfer from the mass-losing star to the mass-accreting
companion by implementing wind expansion based on the analytical Parker solution for
isothermal winds. Mass capture fractions are calculated and found to be dependent on the
velocity of the wind. The structure of the accretion discs formed is also investigated. The
results show that all the accretion discs have radial extents larger than the predicted stability
radius against thermal viscous instabilities. It is nevertheless found that the surface
density profiles of the accretion discs are too low to trigger such disc outbursts. I also
explore the effect of rotation on mass transfer and disc morphology.
I also study the interaction between the transiting hot Jupiter WASP-12b and its host
star, using ZEUS-2D and SPH-3D to simulate the planetary magnetosphere interactions
with the stellar wind self-consistently. I attempt to model NUV absorption due to enhancements
in density at the bow shock ahead of the planet. The numerical results show
that the bow shock is always weak and broad due to the modest wind Mach number at the
planetary distance. I compute theoretical UV light-curves from the hydrodynamic models
and use a grid of stellar wind, planetary magnetic field strength and wind opacity parameters
to show how the UV light-curves depend on different physical model parameters. The
results show consistency with the existing UV data for WASP-12b. I also model two other
transiting hot Jupiters and show that additional UV observations of more massive short-orbit
hot Jupiters should distinguish clearly between different models for circumplanetary
absorption.