687 research outputs found
Evidence for an external origin of heavy elements in hot DA white dwarfs
We present a series of systematic abundance measurements for 89 hydrogen
atmosphere (DA-type) white dwarfs with temperatures spanning 16000-77000K drawn
from the FUSE spectral archive. This is the largest study to date of white
dwarfs where radiative forces are significant, exceeding our earlier work,
based mainly on IUE and HST data, by a factor three. Using heavy element
blanketed non-LTE stellar atmosphere calculations, we have addressed the heavy
element abundance patterns making completely objective measurements of
abundance values and their error ranges using a \c{hi}2 fitting technique. We
are able to establish the broad range of abundances seen in a given temperature
range and establish the incidence of stars which appear, in the optical, to be
atmospherically devoid of any material other than H. We compare the observed
abundances to predictions of radiative levitation calculations, revealing
little agreement. We propose that the supply of heavy elements is accreted from
external sources rather than being intrinsic to the star. These elements are
then retained in the white dwarf atmospheres by radiative levitation, a model
that can explain both the diversity of measured abundances for stars of similar
temperature and gravity, including cases with apparently pure H envelopes, and
the presence of photospheric metals at temperatures where radiative levitation
is no longer effective.Comment: 23 pages. 13 Figures, 4 Tables. Accepted for publication in the
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ
Metal abundances in PG1159 stars from Chandra and FUSE spectroscopy
We investigate FUSE spectra of three PG1159 stars and do not find any
evidence for iron lines. From a comparison with NLTE models we conclude a
deficiency of 1-1.5 dex. We speculate that iron was transformed into heavier
elements. A soft X-ray Chandra spectrum of the unique H- and He-deficient star
H1504+65 is analyzed. We find high neon and magnesium abundances and confirm
that H1504+65 is the bare core of either a C-O or a O-Ne-Mg white dwarf.Comment: To be published in: Proceedings 13th European Workshop on White
Dwarfs, NATO Science Series, 4 pages, 1 figur
Constraining the Atmospheric Composition of the Day-Night Terminators of HD 189733b : Atmospheric Retrieval with Aerosols
A number of observations have shown that Rayleigh scattering by aerosols
dominates the transmission spectrum of HD 189733b at wavelengths shortward of 1
m. In this study, we retrieve a range of aerosol distributions consistent
with transmission spectroscopy between 0.3-24 m that were recently
re-analyzed by Pont et al. (2013). To constrain the particle size and the
optical depth of the aerosol layer, we investigate the degeneracies between
aerosol composition, temperature, planetary radius, and molecular abundances
that prevent unique solutions for transit spectroscopy. Assuming that the
aerosol is composed of MgSiO, we suggest that a vertically uniform aerosol
layer over all pressures with a monodisperse particle size smaller than about
0.1 m and an optical depth in the range 0.002-0.02 at 1 m provides
statistically meaningful solutions for the day/night terminator regions of HD
189733b. Generally, we find that a uniform aerosol layer provide adequate fits
to the data if the optical depth is less than 0.1 and the particle size is
smaller than 0.1 m, irrespective of the atmospheric temperature, planetary
radius, aerosol composition, and gaseous molecules. Strong constraints on the
aerosol properties are provided by spectra at wavelengths shortward of 1 m
as well as longward of 8 m, if the aerosol material has absorption
features in this region. We show that these are the optimal wavelengths for
quantifying the effects of aerosols, which may guide the design of future space
observations. The present investigation indicates that the current data offer
sufficient information to constrain some of the aerosol properties of
HD189733b, but the chemistry in the terminator regions remains uncertain.Comment: Transferred to ApJ and accepted. 11 pages, 10 figures, 1 tabl
A Gemini ground-based transmission spectrum of WASP-29b: a featureless spectrum from 515 to 720nm
We report Gemini-South GMOS observations of the exoplanet system WASP-29
during primary transit as a test case for differential spectrophotometry. We
use the multi-object spectrograph to observe the target star and a comparison
star simultaneously to produce multiple light curves at varying wavelengths.
The 'white' light curve and fifteen 'spectral' light curves are analysed to
refine the system parameters and produce a transmission spectrum from 515 to
720nm. All light curves exhibit time-correlated noise, which we model using a
variety of techniques. These include a simple noise rescaling, a Gaussian
process model, and a wavelet based method. These methods all produce consistent
results, although with different uncertainties. The precision of the
transmission spectrum is improved by subtracting a common signal from all the
spectral light curves, reaching a typical precision of ~1x10^-4 in transit
depth. The transmission spectrum is free of spectral features, and given the
non-detection of a pressure broadened Na feature, we can rule out the presence
of a Na rich atmosphere free of clouds or hazes, although we cannot rule out a
narrow Na core. This indicates that Na is not present in the atmosphere, and/or
that clouds/hazes play a significant role in the atmosphere and mask the broad
wings of the Na feature, although the former is a more likely explanation given
WASP-29b's equilibrium temperature of ~970 K, at which Na can form various
compounds. We also briefly discuss the use of Gaussian process and wavelet
methods to account for time correlated noise in transit light curves.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Published in MNRAS. Figure 2 corrected
in version
The optical transmission spectrum of the hot Jupiter HAT-P-32b: clouds explain the absence of broad spectral features?
We report Gemini-North GMOS observations of the inflated hot Jupiter
HAT-P-32b during two primary transits. We simultaneously observed two
comparison stars and used differential spectro-photometry to produce
multi-wavelength light curves. 'White' light curves and 29 'spectral' light
curves were extracted for each transit and analysed to refine the system
parameters and produce transmission spectra from 520-930nm in ~14nm bins. The
light curves contain time-varying white noise as well as time-correlated noise,
and we used a Gaussian process model to fit this complex noise model. Common
mode corrections derived from the white light curve fits were applied to the
spectral light curves which significantly improved our precision, reaching
typical uncertainties in the transit depth of ~2x10^-4, corresponding to about
half a pressure scale height. The low resolution transmission spectra are
consistent with a featureless model, and we can confidently rule out broad
features larger than about one scale height. The absence of Na/K wings or
prominent TiO/VO features is most easily explained by grey absorption from
clouds in the upper atmosphere, masking the spectral features. However, we
cannot confidently rule out clear atmosphere models with low abundances (~10^-3
solar) of TiO, VO or even metal hydrides masking the Na and K wings. A smaller
scale height or ionisation could also contribute to muted spectral features,
but alone are unable to to account for the absence of features reported here.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Do the constants of nature couple to strong gravitational fields?
Recently, white dwarf stars have found a new use in the fundamental physics
community. Many prospective theories of the fundamental interactions of Nature
allow traditional constants, like the fine structure constant , to vary
in some way. A study by Berengut et al. (2013) used the Fe/Ni V line
measurements made by Preval et al. (2013) from the hot DA white dwarf G191-B2B,
in an attempt to detect any variation in . It was found that the Fe V
lines indicated an increasing alpha, whereas the Ni V lines indicated a
decreasing alpha. Possible explanations for this could be misidentification of
the lines, inaccurate atomic data, or wavelength dependent distortion in the
spectrum. We examine the first two cases by using a high S/N reference spectrum
from the hot sdO BD+284211 to calibrate the Fe/Ni V atomic data. With
this new data, we re-evaluate the work of Berengut et al. (2013) to derive a
new constraint on the variation of alpha in a gravitational field.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures: To appear in the proceedings of the "19th
European White Dwarf Workshop" in Montreal, Canada, 201
Chandra grating spectroscopy of three hot white dwarfs
High-resolution soft X-ray spectroscopic observations of single hot white
dwarfs are scarce. With the Chandra Low-Energy Transmission Grating, we have
observed two white dwarfs, one is of spectral type DA (LB 1919) and the other
is a non-DA of spectral type PG1159 (PG 1520+525). The spectra of both stars
are analyzed, together with an archival Chandra spectrum of another DA white
dwarf (GD 246). The soft X-ray spectra of the two DA white dwarfs are
investigated in order to study the effect of gravitational settling and
radiative levitation of metals in their photospheres. LB 1919 is of interest
because it has a significantly lower metallicity than DAs with otherwise
similar atmospheric parameters. GD 246 is the only white dwarf known that shows
identifiable individual iron lines in the soft X-ray range. For the PG1159
star, a precise effective temperature determination is performed in order to
confine the position of the blue edge of the GW Vir instability region in the
HRD. (abridged)Comment: A&A, in pres
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