Interstellar Bow Shocks around Fast Stars Passing through the Local Interstellar Medium

Abstract

Bow-shocks are produced in the local interstellar medium by the passage of fast stars from the Galactic thin-disk and thick-disk populations with velocities V* = 40-80 km/s. Stellar transits of local H I clouds occur every 3500-7000 yr on average and last between 104 and 105 yr. There could be 10-20 active bow shocks around low-mass stars inside clouds within 10-15 pc of the Sun. At local cloud distances of 3-10 pc, their turbulent wakes have transverse radial extents R wake ≈ 10-300 AU, angular sizes 10-100 arcsec, and Lyman-alpha surface brightnesses of 2-8 Rayleighs in gas with total hydrogen density nH ≈ 0.1~ cm-3 and V* = 40-80 km/s. These transit wakes may cover an area fraction fA ≈ (R wake/R cl) ≈ 10-3 of local H I clouds and be detectable in IR (dust), UV (Lya, two-photon), or non-thermal radio emission. Turbulent heating in these wakes could produce the observed elevated rotational populations of H2 (J ≥ 2) and influence the endothermic formation of CH+ in diffuse interstellar gas at T > 103 K.

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