560 research outputs found
A circumbinary debris disk in a polluted white dwarf system
Planetary systems commonly survive the evolution of single stars, as
evidenced by terrestrial-like planetesimal debris observed orbiting and
polluting the surfaces of white dwarfs. This letter reports the identification
of a circumbinary dust disk surrounding a white dwarf with a substellar
companion in a 2.27 hr orbit. The system bears the dual hallmarks of
atmospheric metal pollution and infrared excess, however the standard (flat and
opaque) disk configuration is dynamically precluded by the binary. Instead, the
detected reservoir of debris must lie well beyond the Roche limit in an
optically thin configuration, where erosion by stellar irradiation is
relatively rapid. This finding demonstrates that rocky planetesimal formation
is robust around close binaries, even those with low mass ratios.Comment: accepted to Nature Astronomy, this is the authors' versio
Most ELÂ CVn systems are inner binaries of hierarchical triples
In spite of their importance for modern astronomy, we do not fully understand how close binary stars containing at least one white dwarf form from main sequence binary stars. The discovery of EL CVn binaries, close pre-white dwarfs with A/F main sequence star companions, offers now the unique possibility to test models of close compact binary star formation. Binary evolution theories predict that these EL CVn stars descend from very close main sequence binaries with orbital periods shorter than 3 days. If this is correct, nearly all EL CVn stars should be inner binaries of hierarchical triples because more than 95 per cent of very close main sequence binaries (the alleged progenitor systems) are found to be hierarchical triples. We here present SPHERE/IRDIS observations of five EL CVn binaries, finding in all of them tertiary objects, as predicted. We conclude that EL CVn systems are inner binaries of hierarchical triples and indeed descend from very close main sequence binaries that experience stable mass transfer
Magnetic dynamos in white dwarfs â II. Relating magnetism and pollution
We investigate whether the recently suggested rotation and crystallization driven dynamo can explain the apparent increase of magnetism in old metal polluted white dwarfs. We find that the effective temperature distribution of polluted magnetic white dwarfs is in agreement with most/all of them having a crystallizing core and increased rotational velocities are expected due to accretion of planetary material which is evidenced by the metal absorption lines. We conclude that a rotation and crystallization driven dynamo offers not only an explanation for the different occurrence rates of strongly magnetic white dwarfs in close binaries, but also for the high incidence of weaker magnetic fields in old metal polluted white dwarfs
Orbital periods and component masses of three double white dwarfs
The merger of close double white dwarfs (CDWDs) is one of the favourite evolutionary
channels for producing Type Ia supernovae (SN Ia). Unfortunately, current theories of
the evolution and formation of CDWDs are still poorly constrained and have several
serious uncertainties, which affect the predicted SN Ia rates. Moreover, current observational
constraints on this evolutionary pathway for SN Ia mainly rely on only 18
double-lined and/or eclipsing CDWDs with measured orbital and stellar parameters
for both white dwarfs. In this paper we present the orbital periods and the individual
masses of three new double-lined CDWDs, derived using a new method. This
method employs mass ratios, the Hα core ratios and spectral model-fitting to constrain
the masses of the components of the pair. The three CDWDs are WD0028â474
(Porb=9.350 ± 0.007 hours, M1 = 0.60 ± 0.06 Mâ, M2 = 0.45 ± 0.04 Mâ), HE0410â
1137 (Porb= 12.208 ± 0.008 hours, M1 = 0.51 ± 0.04Mâ, M2 = 0.39 ± 0.03 Mâ)
and SDSSJ031813.25â010711.7 (Porb= 45.908 ± 0.006 hours, among the longest period
systems, M1 = 0.40 ± 0.05Mâ, M2 = 0.49 ± 0.05Mâ). While the three systems
studied here will merge in timescales longer than the Hubble time and are expected
to become single massive (& 0.9 Mâ) white dwarfs rather than exploding as SN Ia,
increasing the small sample of CDWDs with determined stellar parameters is crucial
for a better overall understanding of their evolution
The SDSS spectroscopic catalogue of white dwarf-main-sequence binaries: new identifications from DRÂ 9â12
We present an updated version of the spectroscopic catalogue of white dwarf-main-sequence (WDMS) binaries from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We identify 938 WDMS binaries within the data releases (DR) 9â12 of SDSS plus 40 objects from DR 1â8 that we missed in our previous works, 646 of which are new. The total number of spectroscopic SDSS WDMS binaries increases to 3294. This is by far the largest and most homogeneous sample of compact binaries currently available. We use a decomposition/fitting routine to derive the stellar parameters of all systems identified here (white dwarf effective temperatures, surface gravities and masses, and secondary star spectral types). The analysis of the corresponding stellar parameter distributions shows that the SDSS WDMS binary population is seriously affected by selection effects. We also measure the NaâI λλ 8183.27, 8194.81 absorption doublet and H α emission radial velocities (RV) from all SDSS WDMS binary spectra identified in this work. 98 objects are found to display RV variations, 62 of which are new. The RV data are sufficient enough to estimate the orbital periods of three close binaries
Most extremely low mass white dwarfs with non-degenerate companions are inner binaries of hierarchical triples
Extremely low-mass white dwarfs (ELM WDs) with non-degenerate companions are believed to originate from solar-type main-sequence binaries undergoing stable Roche lobe o v erflow mass transfer when the ELM WD progenitor is at (or just past) the termination of the main-sequence. This implies that the orbital period of the binary at the onset of the first mass transfer phase must have been âČ 3 â5 d. This prediction in turn suggests that most of these binaries should have tertiary companions since â90 per cent of solar-type main-sequence binaries in that period range are inner binaries of hierarchical triples. Until recently, only precursors of this type of binaries have been observed in the form of EL CVn binaries, which are also known for having tertiary companions. Here, we present high-angular-resolution images of TYC 6992-827-1, an ELM WD with a sub-giant (SG) companion, confirming the presence of a tertiary companion. Furthermore, we show that TYC 6992-827-1, along with its sibling TYC 8394-1331-1 (whose triple companion was detected via radial velocity variations), are in fact descendants of EL CVn binaries. Both TYC 6992-827-1 and TYC 8394-1331-1 will evolve through a common envelope phase, which depending on the ejection efficiency of the envelope, might lead to a single WD or a tight double WD binary, which would likely merge into a WD within a few Gyr due to gravitational wave emission. The former triple configuration will be reduced to a wide binary composed of a WD (the merger product) and the current tertiary companio
Magnetic dynamos in white dwarfs â III: explaining the occurrence of strong magnetic fields in close double white dwarfs
The origin of strong (â âŒ>1MGâ ) magnetic fields in white dwarfs has been a puzzle for decades. Recently, a dynamo mechanism operating in rapidly rotating and crystallizing white dwarfs has been suggested to explain the occurrence rates of strong magnetic fields in white dwarfs with close low-mass main-sequence star companions. Here, we investigate whether the same mechanism may produce strong magnetic fields in close double white dwarfs. The only known strongly magnetic white dwarf that is part of a close double white dwarf system, the magnetic component of NLTTâ12758, is rapidly rotating and likely crystallizing and therefore the proposed dynamo mechanism represents an excellent scenario for the origin of its magnetic field. Presenting a revised formation scenario for NLTTâ12758, we find a natural explanation for the rapid rotation of the magnetic component. We furthermore show that it is not surprising that strong magnetic fields have not been detected in all other known double white dwarfs. We therefore conclude that the incidence of magnetic fields in close double white dwarfs supports the idea that a rotation- and crystallization-driven dynamo plays a major role in the generation of strong magnetic fields in white dwarfs
Circular polarimetry of suspect wind-accreting magnetic pre-polars
We present results from a circular polarimetric survey of candidate detached magnetic white dwarf â M dwarf binaries obtained using the Nordic Optical Telescope, La Palma. We obtained phase resolved spectropolarimetry and imaging polarimetry of seven systems, five of which show clearly variable circular polarisation. The data indicate that these targets have white dwarfs with magnetic field strengths >80 MG. Our study reveals that cyclotron emission can dominate the optical luminosity at wavelengths corresponding to the cyclotron emission harmonics, even in systems where the white dwarfs are only wind-accreting. This implies that a very significant fraction of the the stellar wind of the companion star is captured by the magnetic white dwarf reducing the magnetic braking in pre-CVs. Furthermore, the polarimetric confirmation of several detached, wind-accreting magnetic systems provides observational constraints on the models of magnetic CV evolution and white dwarf magnetic field generation. We also find that the white dwarf magnetic field configuration in at least two of these systems appears to be very complex
WD1032+011, an inflated brown dwarf in an old eclipsing binary with a white dwarf
We present the discovery of only the third brown dwarf known to eclipse a non-accreting white dwarf. Gaia parallax information and multicolour photometry confirm that the white dwarf is cool (9950 ± 150 K) and has a low mass (0.45 ± 0.05 Mâ), and spectra and light curves suggest the brown dwarf has a mass of 0.067 ± 0.006 Mâ (70MJup) and a spectral type of L5 ± 1. The kinematics of the system show that the binary is likely to be a member of the thick disc and therefore at least 5-Gyr old. The high-cadence light curves show that the brown dwarf is inflated, making it the first brown dwarf in an eclipsing white dwarf-brown dwarf binary to be so
SDSS J105754.25+275947.5: a period-bounce eclipsing cataclysmic variable with the lowest-mass donor yet measured
We present high-speed, multicolour photometry of the faint, eclipsing cataclysmic variable (CV) SDSS J105754.25+275947.5. The light from this system is dominated by the white dwarf. Nonetheless, averaging many eclipses reveals additional features from the eclipse of the bright spot. This enables the fitting of a parameterised eclipse model to these average light curves, allowing the precise measurement of system parameters. We find a mass ratio of q = 0.0546 0.0020 and inclination i = 85.74 0.21. The white dwarf and donor masses were found to be M = 0.800 0.015 M and M = 0.0436 0.0020 M, respectively. A temperature T = 13300 1100 K and distance d = 367 26 pc of the white dwarf were estimated through fitting model atmosphere predictions to multicolour fluxes. The mass of the white dwarf in SDSS 105754.25+275947.5 is close to the average for CV white dwarfs, while the donor has the lowest mass yet measured in an eclipsing CV. A low-mass donor and an orbital period (90.44 min) significantly longer than the period minimum strongly suggest that this is a bona fide period-bounce system, although formation from a white dwarf/brown dwarf binary cannot be ruled out. Very few period-minimum/period-bounce systems with precise system parameters are currently known, and as a consequence the evolution of CVs in this regime is not yet fully understood
- âŠ