Envelope Ejection and the Transition to Homologous Expansion in Common-Envelope Events
Abstract
We conduct a long-timescale (5000\,d) 3-D simulation of a common-envelope event with a 2\,M red giant and a 1\,M main sequence companion, using the moving-mesh hydrodynamic solver MANGA. Starting with an orbital radius of 52\,R, our binary shrinks to an orbital radius of 5\,R in 200\,d. We show that over a timescale of about 1500\,d, the envelope is completely ejected while 80 per cent is ejected in about 400\,d. The complete ejection of the envelope is solely powered by the orbital energy of the binary, without the need for late-time reheating from recombination or jets. Motivated by recent theoretical and observational results, we also find that the envelope enters a phase of homologous expansion about 550\, d after the start of our simulation. We also run a simplified 1-D model to show that heating from the central binary in the envelope at late times does not influence the ejection. This homologous expansion of the envelope would likely simplify calculations of the observational implications such as light curves.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.