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The collision and merger products of stars do not look alike: A magnetohydrodynamics comparison (2510.13736v1)

Published 15 Oct 2025 in astro-ph.SR and astro-ph.HE

Abstract: A significant fraction of stars experience close interactions, including collisions resulting from gravitational encounters and mergers within close binary systems. These processes can produce more massive stars that may give rise to relatively rare objects such as blue stragglers. Distinguishing the outcomes of collisions and mergers is challenging yet essential for interpreting observations. This study utilizes the magnetohydrodynamics code AREPO to simulate collisions and mergers of $5$ to $10 \,\mathrm{M}_{\odot}$ main-sequence stars, systematically comparing the properties of the resulting products. Both collisions and mergers yield more massive, strongly magnetized, rapidly and differentially rotating stars with cores enriched in hydrogen, but notable quantitative differences emerge. Merger products exhibit core hydrogen fractions up to $10\%$ higher than those of collision products. In both scenarios, turbulent mixing amplifies magnetic field energies by $9$ to $12$ orders of magnitude. However, magnetic fields in small-impact-parameter collision products display small-scale reversals that may dissipate over time, whereas merger products and large-impact-parameter collision products develop large-scale ordered, potentially long-lived magnetic fields. Additionally, only merger products display magnetically driven, bipolar outflows with radial velocities exceeding $300$ to $400 \,\mathrm{km}\,\mathrm{s}{-1}$. These distinctions may result in divergent long-term evolutionary outcomes, which warrant further investigation in future studies.

Summary

  • The paper establishes significant differences in core hydrogen mixing and magnetic field topology between collisions and mergers using AREPO MHD simulations.
  • It demonstrates that merger products achieve higher core rejuvenation, rapid differential rotation, and ordered magnetic fields leading to bipolar outflows.
  • The study implies that stellar interaction dynamics crucially impact long-term evolution and magnetic phenomena in massive stars.

Magnetohydrodynamic Distinctions Between Stellar Collision and Merger Products

Introduction

This paper presents a systematic magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) comparison of the outcomes of stellar collisions and mergers among main-sequence (MS) stars in the $5$–10M10\,M_\odot range. Using the AREPO moving-mesh MHD code, the authors simulate both parabolic collisions and binary mergers, focusing on the resulting internal structure, chemical mixing, rotation, magnetic field amplification, and outflow properties. The central claim is that, despite superficial similarities, the products of collisions and mergers exhibit quantitatively and qualitatively distinct properties, particularly in their magnetic field configurations and outflow phenomena.

Simulation Methodology and Initial Conditions

The initial stellar models are generated with MESA for $10$ Myr-old, non-rotating MS stars at solar metallicity. These 1D profiles are mapped to 3D AREPO meshes using HEALPix shell-layering, followed by relaxation to ensure dynamical stability. The initial magnetic field is a dipole configuration with Bpole=1B_\mathrm{pole}=1 G, truncated at $100$ G in the core to avoid numerical artifacts. The simulations resolve each star with 2×105\sim2\times10^5 cells per MM_\odot, yielding numerical Reynolds numbers Renum700\mathrm{Re}_\mathrm{num}\sim700–$1000$, sufficient for capturing turbulent magnetic amplification. Figure 1

Figure 1

Figure 1: Initial density and temperature profiles of $10$ Myr-old MS stars of different masses, showing agreement between MESA and AREPO except at low-density outer layers.

Collisions are modeled as parabolic encounters with impact parameters b=0.25b=0.25 and b=0.50b=0.50 (where bb is the closest approach in units of the sum of stellar radii). Mergers are initiated from circular binaries with artificially accelerated inspiral to achieve coalescence on computationally feasible timescales.

Chemical Mixing and Core Rejuvenation

Both collisions and mergers induce strong mixing, transporting hydrogen from the envelope into the core and helium outward, resulting in rejuvenated cores. However, merger products consistently exhibit higher core hydrogen fractions—up to 10%10\% greater than collision products in some cases. This difference is attributed to the sorting of material by buoyancy during coalescence, with merger dynamics favoring the less massive star's material in the core. Figure 2

Figure 2: Mid-plane snapshots of a 10M10\,M_\odot + 5M5\,M_\odot collision (b=0.25b=0.25), showing density, passive scalar mixing, and magnetic field amplification at four stages.

Figure 3

Figure 3: Analogous mid-plane snapshots for a 10M10\,M_\odot + 5M5\,M_\odot merger, highlighting more pronounced magnetic field amplification and distinct mixing patterns.

Figure 4

Figure 4

Figure 4: Mass profiles of hydrogen fraction XX for collision (left) and merger (right) products, demonstrating higher core XX in mergers.

The enhanced core hydrogen in mergers implies longer MS lifetimes and potentially divergent post-MS evolutionary tracks, especially in the context of blue straggler formation and supergiant progenitors.

Rotational Properties and Structural Flattening

Angular momentum transfer during coalescence leads to rapid, differential rotation in both collision and merger products. Merger products and b=0.50b=0.50 collision products reach angular frequencies ω/ωcrit0.8\omega/\omega_\mathrm{crit}\sim0.8–$0.9$, while b=0.25b=0.25 collision products are limited to 0.5\sim0.5–$0.6$. The degree of rotational flattening correlates with spin rate: merger products exhibit peanut-shaped density contours, in contrast to the ellipsoidal shapes of collision products. Figure 5

Figure 5

Figure 5: Radial profiles of ω/ωcrit\omega/\omega_\mathrm{crit} for collision (left) and merger (right) products, showing mergers closer to break-up velocity.

Figure 6

Figure 6

Figure 6

Figure 6: Edge-on slices of density, azimuthal magnetic field, plasma beta, and radial velocity for 8+7M8+7\,M_\odot collision (b=0.25b=0.25 and b=0.50b=0.50) and merger products, illustrating structural and magnetic differences.

Magnetic Field Amplification and Topology

Turbulent mixing during coalescence drives exponential amplification of magnetic energy by $9$–$12$ orders of magnitude, saturating at Emag1045E_\mathrm{mag}\sim10^{45}104810^{48} erg. Merger products and b=0.50b=0.50 collision products reach higher EmagE_\mathrm{mag} than b=0.25b=0.25 collisions. Crucially, the magnetic field topology differs: b=0.25b=0.25 collision products exhibit small-scale reversals, indicative of short-lived fields susceptible to reconnection and dissipation. In contrast, merger products and b=0.50b=0.50 collisions develop large-scale, ordered fields conducive to long-term dynamo action. Figure 7

Figure 7

Figure 7: Time evolution of total magnetic energy for collisions (left) and mergers (right), showing rapid amplification and higher saturation in mergers.

The presence of large-scale ordered fields in merger products aligns with observational evidence for strong magnetism in a subset of massive stars and supports merger-driven magnetar formation scenarios.

Magnetized Bipolar Outflows

A key distinction is the emergence of magnetically driven, bipolar axial outflows in merger products, with radial velocities vr>300v_r>300–$400$ km/s and plasma beta β0.01\beta\sim0.01–$0.1$ (magnetic pressure dominating). These outflows are absent in all collision products, regardless of impact parameter. The development of outflows is attributed to the longer interaction timescales and sustained central magnetic fields in mergers, which allow for collimation and acceleration of low-density material along the rotation axis.

(Figure 6, rightmost column)

Figure 6: Bipolar axial outflows in the merger product, absent in collision products, as revealed by edge-on radial velocity slices.

This result has implications for the formation of magnetized winds, circumstellar nebulae, and the observational signatures of merger remnants.

Implications and Future Directions

The paper demonstrates that the products of stellar collisions and mergers, while both more massive, magnetized, and rapidly rotating, are fundamentally distinct in their internal structure, magnetic field topology, and outflow properties. The enhanced core hydrogen and large-scale magnetic fields in merger products suggest longer lifetimes and greater potential for sustained magnetism, with direct relevance to the origin of blue stragglers, magnetic massive stars, and magnetars.

The absence of magnetized outflows in collision products, even at higher impact parameters, underscores the importance of interaction timescale and dynamical history in shaping remnant properties. These findings motivate further investigation using 1D stellar evolution models to track the long-term fate of collision and merger products, as well as observational campaigns to distinguish their signatures in young clusters and the field.

Conclusion

This work provides a comprehensive MHD comparison of stellar collision and merger products, establishing that mergers yield remnants with higher core hydrogen, faster rotation, large-scale ordered magnetic fields, and magnetized bipolar outflows, in contrast to the more chaotic and less magnetized outcomes of collisions. These differences have significant implications for stellar evolution, cluster dynamics, and the origin of magnetic phenomena in massive stars. Future studies should extend these simulations to longer timescales and broader parameter spaces, integrating observational constraints to refine models of stellar interaction outcomes.

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