24 research outputs found
Discovery of an ultramassive pulsating white dwarf
We announce the discovery of the most massive pulsating hydrogen-atmosphere
(DA) white dwarf (WD) ever discovered, GD 518. Model atmosphere fits to the
optical spectrum of this star show it is a 12,030 +/- 210 K WD with a log(g) =
9.08 +/- 0.06, which corresponds to a mass of 1.20 +/- 0.03 Msun. Stellar
evolution models indicate that the progenitor of such a high-mass WD endured a
stable carbon-burning phase, producing an oxygen-neon-core WD. The discovery of
pulsations in GD 518 thus offers the first opportunity to probe the interior of
a WD with a possible oxygen-neon core. Such a massive WD should also be
significantly crystallized at this temperature. The star exhibits
multi-periodic luminosity variations at timescales ranging from roughly 425-595
s and amplitudes up to 0.7%, consistent in period and amplitude with the
observed variability of typical ZZ Ceti stars, which exhibit non-radial g-mode
pulsations driven by a hydrogen partial ionization zone. Successfully
unraveling both the total mass and core composition of GD 518 provides a unique
opportunity to investigate intermediate-mass stellar evolution, and can
possibly place an upper limit to the mass of a carbon-oxygen-core WD, which in
turn constrains SNe Ia progenitor systems.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Astrophysical Journal Letters, 771, L2 (2013
Discovery of pulsations, including possible pressure modes, in two new extremely low mass, He-core white dwarfs
We report the discovery of the second and third pulsating extremely low mass
white dwarfs (WDs), SDSS J111215.82+111745.0 (hereafter J1112) and SDSS
J151826.68+065813.2 (hereafter J1518). Both have masses < 0.25 Msun and
effective temperatures below 10,000 K, establishing these putatively He-core
WDs as a cooler class of pulsating hydrogen-atmosphere WDs (DAVs, or ZZ Ceti
stars). The short-period pulsations evidenced in the light curve of J1112 may
also represent the first observation of acoustic (p-mode) pulsations in any WD,
which provide an exciting opportunity to probe this WD in a complimentary way
compared to the long-period g-modes also present. J1112 is a Teff = 9590 +/-
140 K and log(g) = 6.36 +/- 0.06 WD. The star displays sinusoidal variability
at five distinct periodicities between 1792-2855 s. In this star we also see
short-period variability, strongest at 134.3 s, well short of expected g-modes
for such a low-mass WD. The other new pulsating WD, J1518, is a Teff = 9900 +/-
140 K and log(g) = 6.80 +/- 0.05 WD. The light curve of J1518 is highly
non-sinusoidal, with at least seven significant periods between 1335-3848 s.
Consistent with the expectation that ELM WDs must be formed in binaries, these
two new pulsating He-core WDs, in addition to the prototype SDSS
J184037.78+642312.3, have close companions. However, the observed variability
is inconsistent with tidally induced pulsations and is so far best explained by
the same hydrogen partial-ionization driving mechanism at work in classic
C/O-core ZZ Ceti stars.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted to The Astrophysical Journa
Probing the Dust and Gas in the Transitional Disk of CS Cha with Spitzer
Here we present the Spitzer IRS spectrum of CS Cha, a member of the ~2 Myr
old Chamaeleon star-forming region, which reveals an optically thick
circumstellar disk truncated at ~43 AU, the largest hole modeled in a
transitional disk to date. Within this inner hole, ~5x10^-5 lunar masses of
dust are located in a small optically thin inner region which extends from 0.1
to 1 AU. In addition, the disk of CS Cha has bigger grain sizes and more
settling than the previously modeled transitional disks DM Tau, GM Aur, and
CoKu Tau/4, suggesting that CS Cha is in a more advanced state of dust
evolution. The Spitzer IRS spectrum also shows [Ne II] 12.81 micron
fine-structure emission with a luminosity of 1.3x10^29 ergs s^-1, indicating
that optically thin gas is present in this ~43 AU hole, in agreement with
H_alpha measurements and a UV excess which indicate that CS Cha is still
accreting 1.2x10^-8 M_sun yr^-1. We do not find a correlation of the [Ne II]
flux with L_X, however, there is a possible correlation with mass accretion
rate, which if confirmed would suggest that EUV fluxes due to accretion are the
main agent for formation of the [Ne II] line.Comment: accepted to ApJ Letter
Radius constraints from high-speed photometry of 20 low-mass white dwarf binaries
We carry out high-speed photometry on 20 of the shortest-period, detached
white dwarf binaries known and discover systems with eclipses, ellipsoidal
variations (due to tidal deformations of the visible white dwarf), and Doppler
beaming. All of the binaries contain low-mass white dwarfs with orbital periods
less than 4 hr. Our observations identify the first eight tidally distorted
white dwarfs, four of which are reported for the first time here, which we use
to put empirical constraints on the mass-radius relationship for extremely
low-mass (<0.30 Msun) white dwarfs. We also detect Doppler beaming in several
of these binaries, which confirms the high-amplitude radial-velocity
variability. All of these systems are strong sources of gravitational
radiation, and long-term monitoring of those that display ellipsoidal
variations can be used to detect spin-up of the tidal bulge due to orbital
decay.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Found: the progenitors of AM CVn and supernovae .Ia
We present optical and X-ray observations of two tidally distorted, extremely low-mass white dwarfs (WDs) with massive companions. There is no evidence of neutron stars in our Chandra and XMM observations of these objects. SDSS J075141.18−014120.9 (J0751) is an eclipsing double WD binary containing a 0.19 M⊙ WD with a 0.97 M⊙ companion in a 1.9 h orbit. J0751 becomes the fifth eclipsing double WD system currently known. SDSS J174140.49+652638.7 (J1741) is another binary containing a 0.17 M⊙ WD with an unseen M ≥ 1.11 M⊙ WD companion in a 1.5-h orbit. With a mass ratio of ≈0.1, J1741 will have stable mass transfer through an accretion disc and turn into an interacting AM Canum Venaticorum (AM CVn) system in the next ≈160 Myr. With a mass ratio of 0.2, J0751 is likely to follow a similar evolutionary path. These are the first known AM CVn progenitor binary systems and they provide important constraints on the initial conditions for AM CVn. Theoretical studies suggest that both J0751 and J1741 may create thermonuclear supernovae in ∼10^8 yr, either .Ia or Ia. Such explosions can account for ∼1 per cent of the Type Ia supernova rate
2020 American College of Rheumatology Guideline for the Management of Gout
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/155484/1/art41247.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/155484/2/art41247_am.pd
SDSS J074511.56+194926.5 : discovery of a metal rich and tidally distorted extremely low mass white dwarf
We present the discovery of an unusual, tidally distorted extremely low mass white dwarf (WD) with nearly solar metallicity. Radial velocity measurements confirm that this is a compact binary with an orbital period of 2.6975 hr and a velocity semi-amplitude of K = 108.7 km s–1. Analysis of the hydrogen Balmer lines yields an effective temperature of T eff = 8380 K and a surface gravity of log g = 6.21 that in turn indicate a mass of M = 0.16 M ☉ and a cooling age of 4.2 Gyr. In addition, a detailed analysis of the observed metal lines yields abundances of log (Mg/H) = –3.90, log (Ca/H) = –5.80, log (Ti/H) = –6.10, log (Cr/H) = –5.60, and log (Fe/H) = –4.50, similar to the sun. We see no evidence of a debris disk from which these metals would be accreted, though the possibility cannot entirely be ruled out. Other potential mechanisms to explain the presence of heavy elements are discussed. Finally, we expect this system to ultimately undergo unstable mass transfer and merge to form a ~0.3-0.6 M ☉ WD in a few Gyr
A new class of pulsating white dwarf of extremely low mass : the fourth and fifth members
We report the discovery of two new pulsating extremely low-mass (ELM) white dwarfs (WDs), SDSS J161431.28+191219.4 (hereafter J1614) and SDSS J222859.93+362359.6 (hereafter J2228). Both WDs have masses <0.25 M⊙ and thus likely harbour helium cores. Spectral fits indicate these are the two coolest pulsating WDs ever found. J1614 has Teff = 8880 ± 170 K and log g = 6.66 ± 0.14, which corresponds to a ∼0.19 M⊙ WD. J2228 is considerably cooler, with a Teff = 7870 ± 120 K and log g = 6.03 ± 0.08, which corresponds to an ∼0.16 M⊙ WD, making it the coolest and lowest mass pulsating WD known. There are multiple ELM WDs with effective temperatures between the warmest and coolest known ELM pulsators that do not pulsate to observable amplitudes, which questions the purity of the instability strip for low-mass WDs. In contrast to the CO-core ZZ Ceti stars, which are believed to represent a stage in the evolution of all such WDs, ELM WDs may not all evolve as a simple cooling sequence through an instability strip. Both stars exhibit long-period variability (1184-6235 s) consistent with non-radial g-mode pulsations. Although ELM WDs are preferentially found in close binary systems, both J1614 and J2228 do not exhibit significant radial-velocity variability, and are perhaps in low-inclination systems or have low-mass companions. These are the fourth and fifth pulsating ELM WDs known, all of which have hydrogen-dominated atmospheres, establishing these objects as a new class of pulsating W