21 research outputs found
A common origin of magnetism from planets to white dwarfs
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Isolated magnetic white dwarfs have field strengths ranging from kilogauss to gigagauss. However, the origin of the magnetic field has not been hitherto elucidated. Whether these fields are fossil, hence the remnants of original weak magnetic fields amplified during the course of the evolution of their progenitor stars, or are the result of binary interactions, or, finally, they are produced by other internal physical mechanisms during the cooling of the white dwarf itself, remains a mystery. At sufficiently low temperatures, white dwarfs crystallize. Upon solidification, phase separation of its main constituents, 12C and 16O, and of the impurities left by previous evolution occurs. This process leads to the formation of a Rayleigh–Taylor unstable liquid mantle on top of a solid core. This convective region, as it occurs in solar system planets like the Earth and Jupiter, can produce a dynamo able to yield magnetic fields of strengths of up to 0.1 MG, thus providing a mechanism that could explain magnetism in single white dwarfs.This work has been supported by MINECO grants ESP2013-
47637-P, ESP2015-66134-R (J.I.), and AYA2014-59084-P
(E.G.-B.), by the European Union FEDER funds, by grants
2014SGR1458 (J.I.), 2014SGR0038 (E.G.-B.) of the AGAUR,
and by the CERCS program of the Generalitat de Catalunya
White dwarf dynamical interactions and fast optical transients
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this record.Recent advances in time-domain astronomy have uncovered a new class of optical
transients with timescales shorter than typical supernovae and a wide range of peak
luminosities. Several subtypes have been identi ed within this broad class, including
Ca-rich transients, .Ia supernovae, and fast/bright transients. We examine the predic-
tions from a state-of-the-art grid of three-dimensional simulations of dynamical white
dwarf interactions in the context of these fast optical transients. We nd that for colli-
sions involving carbon-oxygen or oxygen-neon white dwarfs the peak luminosities and
durations of the light curves in our models are in good agreement with the properties
of fast/bright transients. When one of the colliding white dwarfs is made of helium
the properties of the light curves are similar to those of Ca-rich gap transients. The
model lightcurves from our white dwarf collisions are too slow to reproduce those of
.Ia SNe, and too fast to match any normal or peculiar Type Ia supernova.This work was partially funded by the MINECO
grant AYA2014-59084-P and by the AGAUR (EG-B).
CB acknowledges support from grants NASA ADAP
NNX15AM03G S01 and NSF/AST-1412980. We acknowl-
edge the useful comments of our referee, which helped in
improving the original version of the paper
The Spin Evolution of Fast-Rotating, Magnetized Super-Chandrasekhar White Dwarfs in the Aftermath of White Dwarf Mergers
The evolution of the remnant of the merger of two white dwarfs is still an
open problem. Furthermore, few studies have addressed the case in which the
remnant is a magnetic white dwarf with a mass larger than the Chandrasekhar
limiting mass. Angular momentum losses might bring the remnant of the merger to
the physical conditions suitable for developing a thermonuclear explosion.
Alternatively, the remnant may be prone to gravitational or rotational
instabilities, depending on the initial conditions reached after the
coalescence. Dipole magnetic braking is one of the mechanisms that can drive
such losses of angular momentum. However, the timescale on which these losses
occur depend on several parameters, like the strength of the magnetic field. In
addition, the coalescence leaves a surrounding Keplerian disk that can be
accreted by the newly formed white dwarf. Here we compute the post-merger
evolution of a super-Chandrasekhar magnetized white dwarf taking into account
all the relevant physical processes. These include magnetic torques acting on
the star, accretion from the Keplerian disk, the threading of the magnetic
field lines through the disk, as well as the thermal evolution of the white
dwarf core. We find that the central remnant can reach the conditions suitable
to develop a thermonuclear explosion before other instabilities (such as the
inverse beta-decay instability or the secular axisymmetric instability) are
reached, which would instead lead to gravitational collapse of the magnetized
remnant.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
A white dwarf merger as progenitor of the anomalous X-ray pulsar 4U 0142+61?
It has been recently proposed that massive fast-rotating highly-magnetized
white dwarfs could describe the observational properties of some of Soft
Gamma-Ray Repeaters (SGRs) and Anomalous X-Ray Pulsars (AXPs). Moreover, it has
also been shown that high-field magnetic (HFMWDs) can be the outcome of white
dwarf binary mergers. The products of these mergers consist of a hot central
white dwarf surrounded by a rapidly rotating disk. Here we show that the merger
of a double degenerate system can explain the characteristics of the peculiar
AXP 4U 0142+61. This scenario accounts for the observed infrared excess. We
also show that the observed properties of 4U 0142+6 are consistent with an
approximately 1.2 M_{\sun} white dwarf, remnant of the coalescence of an
original system made of two white dwarfs of masses 0.6\, M_{\sun} and 1.0\,
M_{\sun}. Finally, we infer a post-merging age kyr,
and a magnetic field G. Evidence for such a magnetic
field may come from the possible detection of the electron cyclotron absorption
feature observed between the and bands at Hz in the
spectrum of 4U 0142+61.Comment: to appear in ApJ Letter
Electromagnetic emission of white dwarf binary mergers
It has been recently proposed that the ejected matter from white dwarf (WD)
binary mergers can produce transient, optical and infrared emission similar to
the "kilonovae" of neutron star (NS) binary mergers. To confirm this we
calculate the electromagnetic emission from WD-WD mergers and compare with
kilonova observations. We simulate WD-WD mergers leading to a massive, fast
rotating, highly magnetized WD with an adapted version of the
smoothed-particle-hydrodynamics (SPH) code Phantom. We thus obtain initial
conditions for the ejecta such as escape velocity, mass and initial position
and distribution. The subsequent thermal and dynamical evolution of the ejecta
is obtained by integrating the energy-conservation equation accounting for
expansion cooling and a heating source given by the fallback accretion onto the
newly-formed WD and its magneto-dipole radiation. We show that magnetospheric
processes in the merger can lead to a prompt, short gamma-ray emission of up to
erg in a timescale of - s. The bulk of the ejecta
initially expands non-relativistically with velocity and then it
accelerates to due to the injection of fallback accretion energy. The
ejecta become transparent at optical wavelengths around days
post-merger with a luminosity - erg s. The X-ray
emission from the fallback accretion becomes visible around -
day post-merger with a luminosity of erg s. We also predict
the post-merger time at which the central WD should appear as a pulsar
depending on the value of the magnetic field and rotation period.Comment: 12 pages, Accepted for publication in JCA
Spiral instability can drive thermonuclear explosions in binary white dwarf mergers
This is the final version of the article. Available from American Astronomical Society via the DOI in this record.Thermonuclear, or Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), originate from the explosion of carbon–oxygen white dwarfs, and serve as standardizable cosmological candles. However, despite their importance, the nature of the progenitor systems that give rise to SNe Ia has not been hitherto elucidated. Observational evidence favors the double-degenerate channel in which merging white dwarf binaries lead to SNe Ia. Furthermore, significant discrepancies exist between observations and theory, and to date, there has been no self-consistent merger model that yields a SNe Ia. Here we show that a spiral mode instability in the accretion disk formed during a binary white dwarf merger leads to a detonation on a dynamical timescale. This mechanism sheds light on how white dwarf mergers may frequently yield SNe Ia.We thank James Guillochon, Lars Bildsten, Matthew Wise, and Gunnar Martin Lellep for useful discussions and Matthias Aegenheyster for his contributions to the FLASH analysis codes. E.G.B. acknowledges support from MCINN grant AYA2011–23102, and from the European Union FEDER fund. The software used in this work was in part developed by the DOE NNSA-ASC OASCR Flash Center at the University of Chicago. This work used the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE), which is supported by National Science Foundation grant number ACI-1053575. Simulations at UMass Dartmouth were performed on a computer cluster supported by NSF grant CNS-0959382 and AFOSR DURIP grant FA9550-10-1-0354. This research has made use of NASA's Astrophysics Data System and the yt astrophysics analysis software suite Turk et al. (2011). R.T.F. is grateful to have had the opportunity to complete this paper during a visit to the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, which is supported in part by the National Science Foundation under grant No. NSF PHY11-25915
One-armed spiral instability in double-degenerate post-merger accretion disks
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from IOP Publishing via the DOI in this record.Increasing observational and theoretical evidence points to binary white dwarf mergers as the origin of some if not most normal Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia). In this paper, we discuss the post-merger evolution of binary white dwarf (WD) mergers, and their relevance to the double-degenerate channel of SNe Ia. We present 3D simulations of carbon-oxygen (C/O) WD binary systems undergoing unstable mass transfer, varying both the total mass and the mass ratio. We demonstrate that these systems generally give rise to a one-armed gravitational spiral instability. The spiral density modes transport mass and angular momentum in the disk even in the absence of a magnetic field, and are most pronounced for secondary-to-primary mass ratios larger than 0.6. We further analyze carbon burning in these systems to assess the possibility of detonation. Unlike the case of a 1.1 + 1.0M C/O WD binary, we find that WD binary systems with lower mass and smaller mass ratios do not detonate as SNe Ia up to ∼ 8−22 outer dynamical times. Two additional models do however undergo net heating, and their secular increase in temperature could possibly result in a detonation on timescales longer than those considered hereWe thank James Guillochon, Daan Van Rossum, Chris Byrohl, and Pranav Dave for useful discussions. We also would like to thank the anonymous reviewer for their useful comments and insights. The work of EG-B, GA-S and PL-A was partially funded by MINECO AYA2014-59084-P grant and by the AGAUR. The software used in this work was in part developed by the DOE NNSA-ASC OASCR Flash Center at the University of Chicago. This work used the Extreme Science and Engineering discovery Environment (XSEDE), which is supported by National Science Foundation grant number ACI-1053575. Simulations at UMass Dartmouth were performed on a computer cluster supported by NSF grant CNS-0959382 and AFOSR DURIP grant FA9550-10-1-0354. RTF thanks the Institute for Theory and Computation at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, supported in part by the national Science Foundation under grant NSF PHY11-25915, for visiting support during which this work was completed. This research has made use of resources from NASA’s Astrophysics Data System and the yt astrophysics analysis software suite (Turk et al. 2011)