1,061 research outputs found
Theta Hya: Spectroscopic identification of a second B star + white dwarf binary
We report the identification, in an Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer (EUVE)
spectrum, of a hot white dwarf companion to the 3rd magnitude late-B star Theta
Hya (HR3665, HD79469). This is the second B star + white dwarf binary to be
conclusively identified; Vennes, Berghofer and Christian (1997), and Burleigh
and Barstow (1998) had previously reported the spectroscopic discovery of a hot
white dwarf companion to the B5V star y Pup (HR2875). Since these two
degenerate stars must have evolved from main sequence progenitors more massive
than their B star companions, they can be used to place observational lower
limits on the maximum mass for white dwarf progenitors, and to investigate the
upper end of the initial-final mass relation. Assuming a pure hydrogen
composition, we constrain the temperature of the white dwarf companion to Theta
Hya to lie between 25,000K and 31,000K. We also predict that a third bright B
star, 16 Dra (B9.5V), might also be hiding an unresolved hot white dwarf
companion.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
A Survey for Photometric Variability in Isolated Magnetic White Dwarfs—Measuring their Spin Periods
We present the initial findings of a photometric survey of isolated magnetic white dwarfs (MWDs) carried out with the 1.0m Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope. Of our sample of 30 MWDs, we have observed variability in 17 (57%) over our observed timescales (minutes to years), with a further 11 requiring more data, and two that are non-variable at the 1% level. In total we have discovered possible variability in 15 targets that has not been reported before in the literature, and we have measured the spin period of five objects in our sample to within a few percent. We find no correlation between spin period, mass or temperature, but there may be a weak negative correlation between period and field strength for the short-period targets. We have identified 14 MWDs with low field strengths and low temperatures, which are candidates for having star spots on their surfaces and should be followed up with polarimetry. We have also found that three low-field, high temperature MWDs are unexpectedly variable, with no obvious mechanism to cause this
A search for hidden white dwarfs in the ROSAT EUV survey II: Discovery of a distant DA+F6/7V binary system in a direction of low density neutral hydrogen
We report the results of our final search for hot white dwarfs in unresolved,
Sirius-type, binary systems with IUE. One new system, RE J0500-364 (DA+F6/7V),
has been identified. This star appears to lie at a distance of between
500-1000pc, making it one of the most distant white dwarfs, if not the most
distant, to be detected in the EUV surveys. The very low line-of-sight neutral
hydrogen volume density to this object could place a lower limit on the length
of the Beta CMa interstellar tunnel of diffuse gas, which stretches away from
the Local Bubble in a similar direction to RE J0500-364.Comment: 1 LaTex file plus 15 figures; accepted for publication in Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ
Near-infrared spectroscopy of the very low mass companion to the hot DA white dwarf PG1234+482
We present a near-infrared spectrum of the hot (
55,000 K) DA white dwarf PG 1234+482. We confirm that a very low mass companion
is responsible for the previously recognised infrared photometric excess. We
compare spectra of M and L dwarfs, combined with an appropriate white dwarf
model, to the data to constrain the spectral type of the secondary. We find
that uncertainties in the 2MASS photometry of the white dwarf prevent us
from distinguishing whether the secondary is stellar or substellar, and assign
a spectral type of L01 (M9-L1).Therefore, this is the hottest and youngest
( yr) DA white dwarf with a possible brown dwarf companion.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted by MNRA
Detection limits for close eclipsing and transiting sub-stellar and planetary companions to white dwarfs in the WASP survey
We used photometric data from the WASP (Wide-Angle Search for Planets) survey
to explore the possibility of detecting eclipses and transit signals of brown
dwarfs, gas giants and terrestrial companions in close orbit around white
dwarfs. We performed extensive Monte Carlo simulations and we found that for
Gaussian random noise WASP is sensitive to companions as small as the Moon
orbiting a 12 white dwarf. For fainter stars WASP is sensitive to
increasingly larger bodies. Our sensitivity drops in the presence of co-variant
noise structure in the data, nevertheless Earth-size bodies remain readily
detectable in relatively low S/N data. We searched for eclipses and transit
signals in a sample of 194 white dwarfs in the WASP archive however, no
evidence for companions was found. We used our results to place tentative upper
limits to the frequency of such systems. While we can only place weak limits on
the likely frequency of Earth-sized or smaller companions; brown dwarfs and gas
giants (radius R) with periods 0.2 days must certainly be
rare (). More stringent constraints requires significantly larger white
dwarf samples, higher observing cadence and continuous coverage. The short
duration of eclipses and transits of white dwarfs compared to the cadence of
WASP observations appears to be one of the main factors limiting the detection
rate in a survey optimised for planetary transits of main sequence stars.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Anisotropic Fluid Modeling of Ionospheric Upflow: Effects of Low‐Altitude Anisotropy and Thermospheric Winds
A new anisotropic fluid model is developed to describe ionospheric upflow responses to magnetospheric forcing by electric fields and broadband ELF waves at altitudes of 90–2500 km. This model is based on a bi‐Maxwellian ion distribution and solves time‐dependent, nonlinear equations of conservation of mass, momentum, parallel energy, and perpendicular energy for six ion species important to E, F, and topside ionospheric regions. It includes chemical and collisional interactions with the neutral atmosphere, photoionization, and electron impact ionization. This model is used to examine differences between isotropic and anisotropic descriptions of ionospheric upflow driven by DC electric fields, possible effects of low‐altitude (km) wave heating, and impacts of neutral winds on ion upflow. Results indicate that isotropic models may overestimate field‐aligned ion velocity responses by as much as ∼48%. Simulations also show significant ionospheric responses at low altitudes to wave heating for very large power spectral densities, but ion temperature anisotropies below the F region peak are dominated by frictional heating from DC electric fields. Neutral winds are shown to play an important role regulating ion upflow. Thermospheric winds can enhance or suppress upward fluxes driven by DC and BBELF fields by 10–20% for the cases examined. The time history of the neutral winds also affects the amount of ionization transported to higher altitudes by DC electric fields
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