Line-Driven Wind
A line-driven wind is an outflow of gas accelerated primarily by the scattering of photons in spectral lines — a process that is orders of magnitude more efficient than continuum scattering because spectral lines have high opacity at specific wavelengths. The mechanism is the dominant driver of winds in hot stars and some accretion disk systems, and it operates through the same radiation-pressure physics that produces radiatively driven winds in active galactic nuclei.
The process is governed by the Sobolev approximation: in the accelerating wind, each spectral line is Doppler-shifted out of resonance with the driving radiation, so the line only interacts with photons in a narrow velocity range. This creates a self-regulating acceleration profile in which the wind velocity increases monotonically until the lines are completely detuned from the radiation field.
Line-driven winds are characterized by a critical luminosity threshold: the wind is launched only when the stellar luminosity exceeds the Eddington limit for line opacity. This threshold behavior produces the same kind of critical-condition dynamics that appear in the magnetocentrifugal launching of jets — suggesting that the launching mechanisms, though physically different, share a common organizational structure of threshold-governed acceleration.
The line-driven wind is typically studied in stellar astrophysics and treated as unrelated to the magnetically driven winds of AGN. But the organizational structure is identical: a critical condition, a threshold-governed acceleration, and a self-regulating flow that carries angular momentum away from the central object. The physics differs; the architecture does not.