66 research outputs found
Stellar and planetary remnants in digital sky surveys
Large scale digital sky surveys have produced an unprecedented volume of
uniform data covering both vast proportions of the sky and a wide range of wavelength,
from the ultraviolet to the near-infrared. The challenge facing astronomers
today is how to use this multitude of information to extract trends, outliers and
and rare objects. For example, a large sample of single white dwarf stars has the
potential to probe the Galaxy through the luminosity function.
The aim of this work was to study stellar and planetary remnants in these
surveys. In the last few decades, it has been shown that a handful of white dwarfs
have remnants of planetary systems around them, in the form of a dusty disc.
These are currently providing the best constraints on the composition of extra-solar
planetary systems. Finding significant numbers of dusty discs is only possible in
large scale digital sky surveys.
I ultilised the SDSS DR7 and colour-colour diagrams to and DA white dwarfs
from optical photometry. This nearly doubled the number of spectroscopically con-
armed DA white dwarfs in the SDSS compared with DR4 [Eisenstein et al., 2006],
and introduced nearly 10; 000 photometric-only DA white dwarf candidates. I further
cross-matched our white dwarf catalogue with UKIDSS LAS DR8 to carry out
the currently largest and deepest untargeted search for low-mass companions to,
and dust discs around, DA white dwarfs. Simultaneously, I analyzed Spitzer observations
of 15 white dwarfs with metal-polluted atmospheres, all but one having
helium-dominated atmospheres. Three of these stars were found to have an infrared
excess consistent with a dusty disc. I used the total sample to estimate a typical
disc lifetime of log[tdisc(yr)] = 5:6+1:1, which is compatible with the relatively large
range estimated from different theoretical models.
Subdwarf population synthesis models predicted a vast population of subdwarfs
with F to K-type companions, produced in the effcient RLOF formation
channel. I used a cross-match of ultraviolet, optical and infrared surveys to search
for this unseen population. I select a complementary sample to those found from
radial velocity surveys, offering direct tests of binary evolution pathways.
Finally, I present a method to use common proper motion white dwarf pairs
to constrain the initial-final mass relation, which is extremely uncertain at low
masses. In the example I show, one of the stars is a magnetic white dwarf with
B ' 6 MG, making this a rare and intriguing system from a magnetic white dwarf
formation point of view
The cool end of the DZ sequence in the SDSS
We report the discovery of cool DZ white dwarfs, which lie in the SDSS (u-g)
vs. (g-r) two-color diagram across and below the main sequence. These stars
represent the extension of the well-known DZ sequence towards cooler
temperatures.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the "17th European Workshop on White
Dwarfs", Tuebingen, Germany, August 16-20, 201
Constraints on the Lifetimes of Disks Resulting from Tidally Destroyed Rocky Planetary Bodies
Spitzer IRAC observations of 15 metal-polluted white dwarfs reveal infrared
excesses in the spectral energy distributions of HE 0110-5630, GD 61, and HE
1349-2305. All three of these stars have helium-dominated atmospheres, and
their infrared emissions are consistent with warm dust produced by the tidal
destruction of (minor) planetary bodies. This study brings the number of
metal-polluted, helium and hydrogen atmosphere white dwarfs surveyed with IRAC
to 53 and 38 respectively. It also nearly doubles the number of metal-polluted
helium-rich white dwarfs found to have closely orbiting dust by Spitzer. From
the increased statistics for both atmospheric types with circumstellar dust, we
derive a typical disk lifetime of log[t_{disk} (yr)] = 5.6+-1.1 (ranging from
3*10^4 - 5*10^6 yr). This assumes a relatively constant rate of accretion over
the timescale where dust persists, which is uncertain. We find that the
fraction of highly metal-polluted helium-rich white dwarfs that have an
infrared excess detected by Spitzer is only 23 per cent, compared to 48 per
cent for metal-polluted hydrogen-rich white dwarfs, and we conclude from this
difference that the typical lifetime of dusty disks is somewhat shorter than
the diffusion time scales of helium-rich white dwarf. We also find evidence for
higher time-averaged accretion rates onto helium-rich stars compared to the
instantaneous accretion rates onto hydrogen-rich stars; this is an indication
that our picture of evolved star-planetary system interactions is incomplete.
We discuss some speculative scenarios that can explain the observations.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, accepted to be published in Ap
Scars of intense accretion episodes at metal-rich white dwarfs
A re-evaluation of time-averaged accretion rates at DBZ-type white dwarfs points to historical, time-averaged rates significantly higher than the currently observed episodes at their DAZ counterparts. The difference between the ongoing, instantaneous accretion rates witnessed at DAZ white dwarfs, which often exceed 10 8gs -1, and those inferred over the past 10 5-10 6yr for the DBZ stars can be of a few orders of magnitude, and therefore must result from high-rate episodes of tens to hundreds of years so that they remain undetected to date. This paper explores the likelihood that such brief, intense accretion episodes of gas-phase material can account for existing data. For reasonable assumptions about the circumstellar gas, accretion rates approaching or exceeding 10 15gs -1 are possible, similar to rates observed in quiescent cataclysmic variables, and potentially detectable with future X-ray missions or wide-field monitoring facilities. Gaseous debris that is prone to such rapid accretion may be abundant immediately following a tidal disruption event via collisions and sublimation, or if additional bodies impinge upon an extant disc. Particulate disc matter accretes at or near the Poynting-Robertson drag rate for long periods between gas-producing events, consistent with rates inferred for dusty DAZ white dwarfs. In this picture, warm DAZ stars without infrared excesses have rates consistent with accretion from particulate discs that remain undetected. This overall picture has implications for quasi-steady state models of accretion and the derived chemical composition of asteroidal debris in DBZ white dwarfs
The evolutionary state of short-period magnetic white dwarf binaries
We present phase-resolved spectroscopy of two new short-period low accretion rate magnetic binaries, SDSS J125044.42+154957.3 (Porb= 86 min) and SDSS J151415.65+074446.5 (Porb= 89 min). Both systems were previously identified as magnetic white dwarfs from the Zeeman splitting of the Balmer absorption lines in their optical spectra. Their spectral energy distributions exhibit a large near-infrared excess, which we interpret as a combination of cyclotron emission and possibly a late-type companion star. No absorption features from the companion are seen in our optical spectra. We derive the orbital periods from a narrow, variable Hα emission line which we show to originate on the companion star. The high radial velocity amplitude measured in both systems suggests a high orbital inclination, but we find no evidence for eclipses in our data. The two new systems resemble the polar EF Eri in its prolonged low state and also SDSS J121209.31+013627.7, a known magnetic white dwarf plus possible brown dwarf binary, which was also recovered by our method
NLTT5306: The shortest Period Detached White Dwarf + Brown Dwarf Binary
We have spectroscopically confirmed a brown dwarf mass companion to the
hydrogen atmosphere white dwarf NLTT5306. The white dwarf's atmospheric
parameters were measured using Sloan Digital Sky Survey and X-Shooter
spectroscopy as T_eff=7756+/-35K and log(g)=7.68+/-0.08, giving a mass for the
primary of M_WD=0.44+/-0.04 M_sun, at a distance of 71+/-4 pc with a cooling
age of 710+/-50 Myr. The existence of the brown dwarf secondary was confirmed
through the near-infrared arm of the X-Shooter data and a spectral type of
dL4-dL7 was estimated using standard spectral indices. Combined radial velocity
measurements from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, X-Shooter and the Hobby-Eberly
Telescope's High Resolution Spectrograph of the white dwarf gives a minimum
mass of 56+/-3 M_jup for the secondary, confirming the substellar nature. The
period of the binary was measured as 101.88+/-0.02 mins using both the radial
velocity data and i'-band variability detected with the INT. This variability
indicates 'day' side heating of the brown dwarf companion. We also observe
H{\alpha} emission in our higher resolution data in phase with the white dwarf
radial velocity, indicating this system is in a low level of accretion, most
likely via a stellar wind. This system represents the shortest period white
dwarf + brown dwarf binary and the secondary has survived a stage of common
envelope evolution, much like its longer period counterpart, WD0137-349. Both
systems likely represent bona-fide progenitors of cataclysmic variables with a
low mass white dwarf and a brown dwarf donor.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
A Spitzer Space Telescope Study of the Debris Disks around four SDSS White Dwarfs
We present Spitzer Space Telescope data of four isolated white dwarfs that
were previously known to harbor circumstellar gaseous disks. IRAC photometry
shows a significant infrared excess in all of the systems, SDSS0738+1835,
SDSS0845+2257, SDSS1043+0855 and SDSS1617+1620, indicative of a dusty extension
to those disks. The 4.5-micron excesses seen in SDSS0738, SDSS0845, and
SDSS1617 are 7.5, 5.7 and 4.5 times the white dwarf contribution, respectively.
In contrast, in SDSS1043, the measured flux density at 4.5 microns is only 1.7
times the white dwarf contribution. We compare the measured IR excesses in the
systems to models of geometrically thin, optically thick disks, and find that
we are able to match the measured SEDs to within 3 sigma of the uncertainties,
although disks with unfeasibly hot inner dust temperatures generally provide a
better fit than those below the dust sublimation temperature. Possible
explanations for the dearth of dust around SDSS1043+0855 are briefly discussed.
Including our previous study of SDSS1228+1040, all five white dwarfs with
gaseous debris disks have significant amounts of dust around them. It is
evident that gas and dust can coexist around these relatively warm, relatively
young white dwarfs.Comment: 20 pages, including 4 figures. Accepted to Ap
Noncommutative geometry induced by spin effects
In this paper we study the nonlocal effects of noncommutative spacetime on
simple physical systems. Our main point is the assumption that the
noncommutative effects are consequences of a background field which generates a
local spin structure. So, we reformulate some simple electrostatic models in
the presence of a spin-deformation contribution to the geometry of the motion,
and we obtain an interesting correlation amongst the deformed area vector, the
3D noncommutative effects and the usual spin vector given in quantum mechanics
framework. Remarkably we can observe that a spin-orbit coupling term comes to
light on the spatial sector of a potential wrote in terms of noncommutative
coordinates what indicates that bound states are particular cases in this
procedure. Concerning to confined or bounded particles in this noncommutative
domain we verify that the kinetic energy is modified by a deformation factor.
Finally, we discuss about perspectives.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur
The Discovery of a Debris Disk Around the DAV White Dwarf PG 1541+651
To search for circumstellar disks around evolved stars, we targeted roughly
100 DA white dwarfs from the Palomar Green survey with the Peters Automated
Infrared Imaging Telescope (PAIRITEL). Here we report the discovery of a debris
disk around one of these targets, the pulsating white dwarf PG 1541+651 (KX
Draconis, hereafter PG1541). We detect a significant flux excess around PG1541
in the K-band. Follow-up near-infrared spectroscopic observations obtained at
the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) and photometric observations with
the warm Spitzer Space Telescope confirm the presence of a warm debris disk
within 0.13-0.36 Rsun (11-32x the stellar radius) at an inclination angle of
60deg. At Teff = 11880 K, PG1541 is almost a twin of the DAV white dwarf
G29-38, which also hosts a debris disk. All previously known dusty white dwarfs
are of the DAZ/DBZ spectral type due to accretion of metals from the disk.
High-resolution optical spectroscopy is needed to search for metal absorption
lines in PG1541 and to constrain the accretion rate from the disk. PG1541 is
only 55 pc away from the Sun and the discovery of its disk in our survey
demonstrates that our knowledge of the nearby dusty white dwarf population is
far from complete.Comment: MNRAS Letters, in pres
The Unseen Population of F to K-type Companions to Hot Subdwarf Stars
We present a method to select hot subdwarf stars with A to M-type companions
using photometric selection criteria. We cover a wide range in wavelength by
combining GALEX ultraviolet data, optical photometry from the SDSS and the
Carlsberg Meridian telescope, near-infrared data from 2MASS and UKIDSS. We
construct two complimentary samples, one by matching GALEX, CMC and 2MASS, as
well as a smaller, but deeper, sample using GALEX, SDSS and UKIDSS. In both
cases, a large number of composite subdwarf plus main-sequence star candidates
were found. We fit their spectral energy distributions with a composite model
in order to estimate the subdwarf and companion star effective temperatures
along with the distance to each system. The distribution of subdwarf effective
temperature was found to primarily lie in the 20,000 - 30,000 K regime, but we
also find cooler subdwarf candidates, making up ~5-10 per cent. The most
prevalent companion spectral types were seen to be main-sequence stars between
F0 and K0, while subdwarfs with M-type companions appear much rarer. This is
clear observational confirmation that a very efficient first stable Roche-lobe
overflow channel appears to produce a large number of subdwarfs with F to
K-type companions. Our samples thus support the importance of binary evolution
for subdwarf formation.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figures, 11 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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