Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2007-09-14
AIPConf.Proc.948:321-325,2007
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
5 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of the conference "Unsolved Problems in Stellar Physics", Cambridge, 2-6 July
Scientific paper
10.1063/1.2818989
In close binaries mass and angular momentum can be transferred from one star to the other during Roche-lobe overflow. The efficiency of this process is not well understood and constitutes one of the largest uncertainties in binary evolution. One of the problems lies in the transfer of angular momentum, which will spin up the accreting star. In very tight systems tidal friction can prevent reaching critical rotation, by locking the spin period to the orbital period. Accreting stars in systems with orbital periods larger than a few days reach critical rotation after accreting only a fraction of their mass, unless there is an effective mechanism to get rid of angular momentum. In low mass stars magnetic field might help. In more massive stars angular momentum loss will be accompanied by strong mass loss. This would imply that most interacting binaries with initial orbital periods larger than a few days evolve very non-conservatively. In this contribution we wish to draw attention to the unsolved problems related to mass and angular momentum transfer in binary systems. We do this by presenting the first results of an implementation of spin up by accretion into the TWIN version of the Eggleton stellar evolution code.
de Mink Selma E.
Glebbeek Evert
Pols Onno R.
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