2,241 research outputs found
Do Magnetic Fields Prevent Hydrogen from Accreting onto Cool Metal-line White Dwarf Stars?
It is generally assumed that metals detected in the spectra of a few cool
white dwarfs cannot be of primordial origin and must be accreted from the
interstellar medium. However, the observed abundances of hydrogen, which should
also be accreted from the interstellar medium, are lower than expected from
metal accretion. Magnetic fields are thought to be the reason for this
discrepancy. We have therefore obtained circular polarization spectra of the
helium-rich white dwarfs GD40 and L745-46A, which both show strong metal lines
as well as hydrogen. Whereas L745-46A might have a magnetic field of about
-6900 G, which is about two times the field strength of 3000G necessary to
repell hydrogen at the Alfen radius, only an upper limit for the field strength
of GD40 of 4000G (with 99% confidence) can be set which is far off the minimum
field strength of 144000G to repell hydrogen.Comment: 4 LaTeX pages, 4 eps figures, to appear in the proceedings of the
14th European Workshop on White Dwarfs, eds. D. Koester and S. Moehler, ASP
Conf. Serie
Carbon-rich (DQ) white dwarfs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Among the spectroscopically identified white dwarfs, a fraction smaller than
2% have spectra dominated by carbon lines, mainly molecular C2, but also in a
smaller group by CI and CII lines. These are together called DQ white dwarfs.
We want to derive atmospheric parameters Teff,log g, and carbon abundances for
a large sample of these stars and discuss implications for their spectral
evolution. Sloan Digital Sky Survey spectra and ugriz photometry were used,
together with GAIA Data Release 2 parallaxes and G band photometry. These were
fitted to synthetic spectra and theoretical photometry derived from model
atmospheres. We found that the DQs hotter than Teff ~10000 K have masses ~0.4
Msun larger than the cooler ones, which have masses typical for the majority of
white dwarfs, ~0.6 Msun. A significant fraction of the hotter objects with Teff
> 14500 K have atmospheres dominated by carbon.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
SDSS White Dwarf mass distribution at low effective temperatures
The DA white dwarfs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, as analyzed in the
papers for Data Releases 1 and 4, show an increase in surface gravity towards
lower effective temperatures below 11500 K. We study the various possible
explanations of this effect, from a real increase of the masses to
uncertainties or deficiencies of the atmospheric models. No definite answer is
found but the tentative conclusion is that it is most likely the current
description of convection in the framework of the mixing-length approximation,
which leads to this effect.Comment: to appear in the proceedings of the 16th European Workshop on White
Dwarfs, Barcelona, 200
Model atmosphere analysis of the extreme DQ white dwarf GSC2U J131147.2+292348
A new model atmosphere analysis for the peculiar DQ white dwarf discovered by
Carollo et al. (2002) is presented. The effective temperature and carbon
abundance have been estimated by fitting both the photometric data
(UBJ,VRF,IN,JHK) and a low resolution spectrum (3500<lambda<7500 A) with a new
model grid for helium-rich white dwarfs with traces of carbon (DQ stars). We
estimate Teff ~ 5120 +/- 200 K and log[C/He] ~ -5.8 +/- 0.5, which make GSC2U
J131147.2+292348 the coolest DQ star ever observed. This result indicates that
the hypothetical transition from C2 to C2H molecules around Teff = 6000 K,
which was inferred to explain the absence of DQ stars at lower temperatures,
needs to be reconsidered.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics Letter
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