905 research outputs found
The age of white dwarf companions
Original paper can be found at: http://www.iop.org/EJ/conf DOI: 10.1088/1742-6596/172/1/012019 [16th European White Dwarfs Workshop]We carried out a spectroscopic investigation of single lined white dwarfs (WDs) in double degenerate (DD) systems and discuss their binary evolution. Simulated spectra of the Hα region are used to derive upper limits on the temperature of the invisible component and thus lower limits on the cooling age. This is done for a range of hypothetical secondary masses and a minimum cooling age deduced. Results are compared with the well known parameters of the visible primary, which allows us to determine a lower limit for the cooling age difference of both WDs. Most of the ten systems in our sample have a minimum age difference of not larger than 0.5 Gyr and their small orbital separation is highly suggestive of at least one unstable mass transfer phase. However, a stable first mass transfer phase is feasible as the age difference is less then 1 Gyr. The results imply that unstable mass transfer is the most likely final contact binary scenario to have occurred in DD systems but the first mass transfer phase is not constrained.Peer reviewe
The detection of an older population in the Magellanic Bridge
The Magellanic system comprises the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), the Small
Magellanic Cloud (SMC), and the less frequently observed Magellanic Bridge and
Magellanic Stream. The Bridge is traced by neutral gas and has an observed
stellar component, while the Stream consists of gas only, with no observed
stellar counterpart to date. This study uses catalogues created in the
direction of the Bridge from 2MASS and WISE to investigate the stellar content
of the Magellanic Bridge. Catalogues were created and colour-magnitude and two
colour diagrams were analysed. A study was also carried out on removing the
Galactic foreground population in the direction of the Magellanic Bridge, which
was an important consideration due to the low stellar density within the
Bridge. This study finds that the Magellanic Bridge contains a candidate older
stellar population in addition to the younger population already known. The
formation of the Magellanic Bridge is likely to have occurred from a tidal
event between the LMC and SMC drawing most of the material into it from the
SMC. An older population in the Bridge indicates that a stellar content was
drawn in during its formation together with a gas component.Comment: 11 pages, 16 figures, accepted by A&A on 17th Jan 201
Indications of a Large Fraction of Spectroscopic Binaries Among Nuclei of Planetary Nebulae
Previous work indicates that about 10% of planetary-nebula nuclei (PNNi) are
photometrically variable short-period binaries with periods of hours to a few
days. These systems have most likely descended from common-envelope (CE)
interactions in initially much wider binaries. Population-synthesis studies
suggest that these very close pairs could be the short-period tail of a much
larger post-CE binary population with periods of up to a few months. We have
initiated a radial-velocity (RV) survey of PNNi with the WIYN 3.5-m telescope
and Hydra spectrograph, which is aimed at discovering these intermediate-period
binaries. We present initial results showing that 10 out of 11 well-observed
PNNi have variable RVs, suggesting that a significant binary population may be
present. However, further observations are required because we have as yet been
unable to fit our sparse measurements with definite orbital periods, and
because some of the RV variability might be due to variations in the stellar
winds of some of our PNNi.Comment: 11 pages, 1 table, no figures. Accepted by the Astrophysical Journal
Letter
White dwarf masses derived from planetary nebulae modelling
We compare the mass distribution of central stars of planetary nebulae (CSPN)
with those of their progeny, white dwarfs (WD). We use a dynamical method to
measure masses with an uncertainty of 0.02 M. The CSPN mass
distribution is sharply peaked at . The WD distribution peaks
at lower masses () and shows a much broader range of masses.
Some of the difference can be explained if the early post-AGB evolution is
faster than predicted by the Bl\"ocker tracks. Between 30 and 50 per cent of WD
may avoid the PN phase because of too low mass. However, the discrepancy cannot
be fully resolved and WD mass distributions may have been broadened by
observational or model uncertainties.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for A&A Letter
Binary sdB Stars with Massive Compact Companions
Original paper can be found at: http://astrosociety.org/pubs/cs/381.html Copyright ASPThe masses of compact objects like white dwarfs, neutron stars and black holes are fundamental to astrophysics, but very difficult to measure. We present the results of an analysis of subluminous B (sdB) stars in close binary systems with unseen compact companions to derive their masses and clarify their nature. Radial velocity curves were obtained from time resolved spectroscopy. The atmospheric parameters were determined in a quantitative spectral analysis. Based on high resolution spectra we were able to measure the projected rotational velocity of the stars with high accuracy. In the distribution of projected rotational velocities signs of tidal locking with the companions are visible. By detecting ellipsoidal variations in the lightcurve of an sdB binary we were able to show that subdwarf binaries with orbital periods up to 0.6 d are most likely synchronized. In this case, the inclination angles and companion masses of the binaries can be tightly constrained. Five invisible companions have masses that are compatible with that of normal white dwarfs or late type main sequence stars. However, four sdBs have compact companions massive enough to be heavy white dwarfs (> 1M⊙), neutron stars or even black holes. Such a high fraction of massive compact companions is not expected from current models of binary evolution
The mass and radius of the M-dwarf in the short period eclipsing binary RR Caeli
We present new photometry and spectroscopy of the eclipsing white dwarf -
M-dwarf binary star RR Cae. We use timings of the primary eclipse from
white-light photo-electric photometry to derive a new ephemeris for the
eclipses. We find no evidence for any period change greater than Pdot/P ~ 5E-12
over a timescale of 10 years. We have measured the effective temperature of the
white dwarf, T_WD, from an analysis of two high resolution spectra of RR Cae
and find T_WD = (7540 +- 175)K. We estimate a spectral type of M4 for the
companion from the same spectra. We have combined new spectroscopic orbits for
the white dwarf and M-dwarf with an analysis of the primary eclipse and cooling
models for helium white dwarfs to measure the mass and radius of the M-dwarf.
The mass of the M-dwarf is (0.182 - 0.183) +- 0.013 Msun and the radius is
(0.203 - 0.215) +- 0.013 Rsun, where the ranges quoted for these values reflect
the range of white dwarf models used. In contrast to previous studies, which
lacked a spectroscopic orbit for the white dwarf, we find that the mass and
radius of the M-dwarf are normal for an M4 dwarf. The mass of the white dwarf
is (0.440 +-0.022) Msun. With these revised masses and radii we find that RR
Cae will become a cataclysmic variable star when the orbital period is reduced
from its current value of 7.3 hours to 121 minutes by magnetic braking in 9-20
Gyr. We note that there is night-to-night variability of a few seconds in the
timing of primary eclipse caused by changes to the shape of the primary
eclipse. We speculate as to the possible causes of this phenomenon. (Abridged)Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. The paper contains 10 figures and
3 table
Surface Detonations in Double Degenerate Binary Systems Triggered by Accretion Stream Instabilities
We present three-dimensional simulations on a new mechanism for the
detonation of a sub-Chandrasekhar CO white dwarf in a dynamically unstable
system where the secondary is either a pure He white dwarf or a He/CO hybrid.
For dynamically unstable systems where the accretion stream directly impacts
the surface of the primary, the final tens of orbits can have mass accretion
rates that range from to s, leading to the
rapid accumulation of helium on the surface of the primary. After of helium has been accreted, the ram pressure of the hot
helium torus can deflect the accretion stream such that the stream no longer
directly impacts the surface. The velocity difference between the stream and
the torus produces shearing which seeds large-scale Kelvin-Helmholtz
instabilities along the interface between the two regions. These instabilities
eventually grow into dense knots of material that periodically strike the
surface of the primary, adiabatically compressing the underlying helium torus.
If the temperature of the compressed material is raised above a critical
temperature, the timescale for triple- reactions becomes comparable to
the dynamical timescale, leading to the detonation of the primary's helium
envelope. This detonation drives shockwaves into the primary which tend to
concentrate at one or more focal points within the primary's CO core. If a
relatively small amount of mass is raised above a critical temperature and
density at these focal points, the CO core may itself be detonated.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Submitted to ApJL. For a high-resolution
version, movies, and other supporting material see
http://www.ucolick.org/~jfg/projects/double-white-dwarf-accretion
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