287 research outputs found
The effects of metallicity on the Galactic disk population of white dwarfs
It has been known for a long time that stellar metallicity plays a
significant role in the determination of the ages of the different Galactic
stellar populations, when main sequence evolutionary tracks are employed. Here
we analyze the role that metallicity plays on the white dwarf luminosity
function of the Galactic disk, which is often used to determine its age. We
employ a Monte Carlo population synthesis code that accounts for the properties
of the population of Galactic disk white dwarfs. Our code incorporates the most
up-to-date evolutionary cooling sequences for white dwarfs with hydrogen-rich
and hydrogen-deficient atmospheres for both carbon-oxygen and oxygen-neon
cores. We use two different models to assess the evolution of the metallicity,
one in which the adopted metallicity is constant with time, but with a moderate
dispersion, and a second one in which the metallicity increases with time. We
found that our theoretical results are in a very satisfactory agreement with
the observational luminosity functions obtained from the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS) and from the SuperCOSMOS Sky Survey (SSS), independently of the
adopted age-metallicity law. In particular, we found that the age-metallicity
law has no noticeable impact in shaping the bright branch of the white dwarf
luminosity function, and that the position of its cut-off is almost insensitive
to the adopoted age-metallicity relationship. Because the shape of the bright
branch of the white dwarf luminosity function is insensitive to the
age-metallicity law, it can be safely employed to test the theoretical
evolutionary sequences, while due to the limited sensitivity of the position of
the drop-off to the distribution of metallicities, its location provides a
robust indicator of the age of the Galactic disk.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Simulating Gaia performances on white dwarfs
One of the most promising space missions of ESA is the astrometric satellite
Gaia, which will provide very precise astrometry and multicolour photometry,
for all 1.3 billion objects to V~20, and radial velocities with accuracies of a
few km/s for most stars brighter than V ~ 17. Consequently, full homogeneous
six-dimensional phase-space information for a huge number of stars will become
available. Our Monte Carlo simulator has been used to estimate the number of
white dwarfs potentially observable by Gaia. From this we assess which would be
the white dwarf luminosity functions which Gaia will obtain and discuss in
depth the scientific returns of Gaia in the specific field of white dwarf
populations. Scientific attainable goals include, among others, a reliable
determination of the age of the Galactic disk, a better knowledge of the halo
of the Milky Way and the reconstruction of the star formation history of the
Galactic disk. Our results also demonstrate the potential impact of a mission
like Gaia in the current understanding of the white dwarf cooling theory.Comment: 13 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The white dwarf cooling sequence of 47 Tucanae
47 Tucanae is one of the most interesting and well observed and theoretically
studied globular clusters. This allows us to study the reliability of our
understanding of white dwarf cooling sequences, to confront different methods
to determine its age, and to assess other important characteristics, like its
star formation history. Here we present a population synthesis study of the
cooling sequence of the globular cluster 47 Tucanae. In particular, we study
the distribution of effective temperatures, the shape of the color-magnitude
diagram, and the corresponding magnitude and color distributions. We do so
using an up-to-date population synthesis code based on Monte Carlo techniques,
that incorporates the most recent and reliable cooling sequences and an
accurate modeling of the observational biases. We find a good agreement between
our theoretical models and the observed data. Thus, our study, rules out
previous claims that there are still missing physics in the white dwarf cooling
models at moderately high effective temperatures. We also derive the age of the
cluster using the termination of the cooling sequence, obtaining a good
agreement with the age determinations using the main-sequence turn-off.
Finally, we find that the star formation history of the cluster is compatible
with that btained using main sequence stars, which predict the existence of two
distinct populations. We conclude that a correct modeling of the white dwarf
population of globular clusters, used in combination with the number counts of
main sequence stars provides an unique tool to model the properties of globular
clusters.Comment: 6 pages and 4 figures accepted for publication in A &
An independent constraint on the secular rate of variation of the gravitational constant from pulsating white dwarfs
A secular variation of the gravitational constant modifies the structure and
evolutionary time scales of white dwarfs. Using an state-of-the-art stellar
evolutionary code and an up-to-date pulsational code we compute the effects of
a secularly varying on the pulsational properties of variable white dwarfs.
Comparing the the theoretical results obtained taking into account the effects
of a running with the observed periods and measured rates of change of the
periods of two well studied pulsating white dwarfs, G117--B15A and R548, we
place constraints on the rate of variation of Newton's constant. We derive an
upper bound yr using the variable
white dwarf G117--B15A, and yr using
R548. Although these upper limits are currently less restrictive than those
obtained using other techniques, they can be improved in a future measuring the
rate of change of the period of massive white dwarfs.Comment: 13 pages, 4 tables, 3 figures. To be published in the Journal of
Cosmology and Astroparticle Physic
Detonations in white dwarf dynamical interactions
In old, dense stellar systems collisions of white dwarfs are a rather
frequent phenomenon. Here we present the results of a comprehensive set of
Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics simulations of close encounters of white dwarfs
aimed to explore the outcome of the interaction and the nature of the final
remnants for different initial conditions. Depending on the initial conditions
and the white dwarf masses, three different outcomes are possible.
Specifically, the outcome of the interaction can be either a direct or a
lateral collision or the interaction can result in the formation of an
eccentric binary system. In those cases in which a collision occurs, the
infalling material is compressed and heated such that the physical conditions
for a detonation may be reached during the most violent phases of the merger.
While we find that detonations occur in a significant number of our
simulations, in some of them the temperature increase in the shocked region
rapidly lifts degeneracy, leading to the quenching of the burning. We thus
characterize under which circumstances a detonation is likely to occur as a
result of the impact of the disrupted star on the surface of the more massive
white dwarf. Finally, we also study which interactions result in bound systems,
and in which ones the more massive white dwarf is also disrupted as a
consequence of the dynamical interaction. The sizable number of simulations
performed in this work allows to find how the outcome of the interaction
depends on the distance at closest approach, and on the masses of the colliding
white dwarfs, and which is the chemical pattern of the nuclearly processed
material. Finally, we also discuss the influence of the masses and core
chemical compositions of the interacting white dwarfs and the different kinds
of impact in the properties of the remnants.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The explosion of supernova 2011fe in the frame of the core-degenerate scenario
We argue that the properties of the Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) SN 2011fe can be best explained within the frame of the core-degenerate (CD) scenario. In the CD scenario, a white dwarf (WD) merges with the core of an asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star and forms a rapidly rotating WD, with a mass close to and above the critical mass for explosion. Rapid rotation prevents immediate collapse and/or explosion. Spinning down over a time of 0-1010 yr brings theWD to explosion. A very long delayed explosion to post-crystallization phase, which lasts for about 2 × 109 yr, leads to the formation of a highly carbon-enriched outer layer. This can account for the carbon-rich composition of the fastest-moving ejecta of SN 2011fe. In reaching the conclusion that the CD scenario best explains the observed properties of SN 2011fe, we consider both its specific properties, like a very compact exploding object and carbon-rich composition of the fastest-moving ejecta, and the general properties of SNe Ia.Facultad de Ciencias Astronómicas y Geofísica
Magnetic white dwarfs: Observations, theory and future prospects
Isolated magnetic white dwarfs have field strengths ranging from 10(3)G to 10(9) G, and constitute an interesting class of objects. The origin of the magnetic field is still the subject of a hot debate. Whether these fields are fossil, hence the remnants of original weak magnetic fields amplified during the course of the evolution of the progenitor of white dwarfs, or on the contrary, are the result of binary interactions or, finally, other physical mechanisms that could produce such large magnetic fields during the evolution of the white dwarf itself, remains to be elucidated. In this work, we review the current status and paradigms of magnetic fields in white dwarfs, from both the theoretical and observational points of view.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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