Mass transport in a neutron star magnetosphere

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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Accretion Disks, Magnetic Field Configurations, Mass Transfer, Neutron Stars, Stellar Magnetospheres, Emission Spectra, Energy Sources, Kepler Laws, X Ray Binaries

Scientific paper

The interaction between a thin Keplerian accretion disk and a magnetosphere surrounding a central object is investigated within the framework of an analytical description for the magnetic field configuration. The commonly held assumption that all accreting plasma flows from the magnetospheric boundary to the stellar surface is shown to be overly restrictive. If the magnetospheric boundary is defined as the distance where the rotation starts deviating significantly from the Kepler rate, it is found that there is an extensive region inside this boundary where gas, nearly corotating with the star, drifts inward across the field by an interchange instability. The linear analysis of this instability is presented. It is also found that gas tied to field lines can be in equilibrium at positions off the midplane, and that gas can plausibly flow from the midplane to these positions, in certain circumstances. The observational consequences of such a picture are briefly discussed.

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