33 research outputs found
The Most Magnetic Stars
Observations of magnetic A, B and O stars show that the poloidal magnetic
flux per unit mass has an upper bound of 10^-6.5 G cm^2/g. A similar upper
bound is found for magnetic white dwarfs even though the highest magnetic field
strengths at their surfaces are much larger. For magnetic A and B stars there
also appears to be a well defined lower bound below which the incidence of
magnetism declines rapidly. According to recent hypotheses, both groups of
stars may result from merging stars and owe their strong magnetism to fields
generated by a dynamo mechanism as they merge. We postulate a simple dynamo
that generates magnetic field from differential rotation. The growth of
magnetic fields is limited by the requirement that the poloidal field
stabilizes the toroidal and vice versa. While magnetic torques dissipate the
differential rotation, toroidal field is generated from poloidal by an Omega
dynamo. We further suppose that mechanisms that lead to the decay of toroidal
field lead to the generation of poloidal. Both poloidal and toroidal fields
reach a stable configuration which is independent of the size of small initial
seed fields but proportional to the initial differential rotation. We pose the
hypothesis that strongly magnetic stars form from the merging of two stellar
objects. The highest fields are generated when the merge introduces
differential rotation that amounts to critical break up velocity within the
condensed object. Calibration of a simplistic dynamo model with the observed
maximum flux per unit mass for main-sequence stars and white dwarfs indicates
that about 1.5x10^-4 of the decaying toroidal flux must appear as poloidal. The
highest fields in single white dwarfs are generated when two degenerate cores
merge inside a common envelope or when two white dwarfs merge by
gravitational-radiation angular momentum loss.Comment: accepted by MNRAS 8 pages, 3 figure
Formation of redbacks via accretion induced collapse
We examine the growing class of binary millisecond pulsars known as redbacks.
In these systems the pulsar's companion has a mass between 0.1 and about 0.5
solar masses in an orbital period of less than 1.5 days. All show extended
radio eclipses associated with circumbinary material. They do not lie on the
period-companion mass relation expected from the canonical intermediate-mass
X-ray binary evolution in which the companion filled its Roche lobe as a red
giant and has now lost its envelope and cooled as a white dwarf. The redbacks
lie closer to, but usually at higher period than, the period-companion mass
relation followed by cataclysmic variables and low-mass X-ray binaries. In
order to turn on as a pulsar mass accretion on to a neutron star must be
sufficiently weak, considerably weaker than expected in systems with low-mass
main-sequence companions driven together by magnetic braking or gravitational
radiation. If a neutron star is formed by accretion induced collapse of a white
dwarf as it approaches the Chandrasekhar limit some baryonic mass is abruptly
lost to its binding energy so that its effective gravitational mass falls. We
propose that redbacks form when accretion induced collapse of a white dwarf
takes place during cataclysmic variable binary evolution because the loss of
gravitational mass makes the orbit expand suddenly so that the companion no
longer fills its Roche lobe. Once activated, the pulsar can ablate its
companion and so further expand the orbit and also account for the extended
eclipses in the radio emission of the pulsar that are characteristic of these
systems. The whole period-companion mass space occupied by the redbacks can be
populated in this way.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
On the Orbital Period of the New Cataclysmic Variable EUVE J2115-586
We have obtained phase-resolved spectroscopy (3660-6040 Å) of the recently discovered cataclysmic variable EUVE J21 15-586 using the 74-inch telescope at Mount Stromlo Observatory. The radial velocity is modulated over a period of 110.8 min with a possible one-cycle-per-day alias of 102.8 min, and a semiamplitude of ≍270 km s-1 at Hβ and ≍390 km s-1 at He II λ4686. The spectroscopic appearance (H I Balmer, Ca II, He I, He II emission lines), the orbital period, and the velocity amplitude indicate that this cataclysmic variable is probably an AM Her type; the absence of cyclotron humps indicates a low intensity magnetic field (B\u3c20 MG). Extreme ultraviolet emission phased at the orbital period shows evidence of variability, but additional EUV/soft x-ray observations are recommended
Cosmic biology in perspective
Abstract: A series of astronomical observations obtained over the period 1986 to 2018 supports the idea that life is a cosmic rather than a purely terrestrial or planetary phenomenon. These include (1) the detection of biologically relevant molecules in interstellar clouds and in comets, (2) mid-infrared spectra of interstellar grains and the dust from comets, (3) a diverse set of data from comets including the Rosetta mission showing consistency with biology and (4) the frequency of Earth-like or habitable planets in the Galaxy. We argue that the conjunction of all the available data suggests the operation of cometary biology and interstellar panspermia rather than the much weaker hypothesis of comets being only the source of the chemical building blocks of life. We conclude with specific predictions on the properties expected of extra-terrestrial life if it is discovered on Enceladus, Europa or beyond. A radically different biochemistry elsewhere can be considered as a falsification of the theory of interstellar panspermia
Does GD 356 have a Terrestrial Planetary Companion?
GD 356 is unique among magnetic white dwarfs because it shows Zeeman-split
Balmer lines in pure emission. The lines originate from a region of nearly
uniform field strength (delta B/B is approximately 0.1) that covers 10 per cent
of the stellar surface in which there is a temperature inversion. The energy
source that heats the photosphere remains a mystery but it is likely to be
associated with the presence of a companion. Based on current models we use
archival Spitzer IRAC observations to place a new and stringent upper limit of
12 Jupiter masses for the mass of such a companion. In the light of this result
and the recent discovery of a 115 min photometric period for GD 356, we exclude
previous models that invoke accretion and revisit the unipolar inductor model
that has been proposed for this system. In this model a highly conducting
planet with a metallic core orbits the magnetic white dwarf and, as it cuts
through field lines, a current is set flowing between the two bodies. This
current dissipates in the photosphere of the white dwarf and causes a
temperature inversion. Such a planet is unlikely to have survived the RGB/AGB
phases of evolution so we argue that it may have formed from the circumstellar
disc of a disrupted He or CO core during a rare merger of two white dwarfs. GD
356 would then be a white dwarf counterpart of the millisecond binary pulsar
PSR 1257+12 which is known to host a planetary system.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted by MNRA
A fast spinning magnetic white dwarf in the double degenerate, super-Chandrasekhar system NLTT 12758
We present an analysis of the close double degenerate NLTT 12758, which is comprised of
a magnetic white dwarf with a field of about 3.1 MG and an apparently non-magnetic white
dwarf. We measured an orbital period of 1.154 d and found that the magnetic white dwarf is
spinning around its axis with a period of 23 min. An analysis of the atmospheric parameters
has revealed that the cooling ages of the two white dwarfs are comparable, suggesting that
they formed within a short period of time from each other. Our modelling indicates that the
non-magnetic white dwarf is more massive (M = 0.83 M) than its magnetic companion
(M = 0.69 M) and that the total mass of the system is higher than the Chandrasekhar mass.
Although the stars will not come into contact over a Hubble time, when they do come into
contact, dynamically unstable mass transfer will take place leading to either an accretion
induced collapse into a rapidly spinning neutron star or a Type Ia supernova
A rotating white dwarf shows different compositions on its opposite faces
White dwarfs, the extremely dense remnants left behind by most stars after
their death, are characterised by a mass comparable to that of the Sun
compressed into the size of an Earth-like planet. In the resulting strong
gravity, heavy elements sink toward the centre and the upper layer of the
atmosphere contains only the lightest element present, usually hydrogen or
helium. Several mechanisms compete with gravitational settling to change a
white dwarf's surface composition as it cools, and the fraction of white dwarfs
with helium atmospheres is known to increase by a factor ~2.5 below a
temperature of about 30,000 K; therefore, some white dwarfs that appear to have
hydrogen-dominated atmospheres above 30,000 K are bound to transition to be
helium-dominated as they cool below it. Here we report observations of ZTF
J203349.8+322901.1, a transitioning white dwarf with two faces: one side of its
atmosphere is dominated by hydrogen and the other one by helium. This peculiar
nature is likely caused by the presence of a small magnetic field, which
creates an inhomogeneity in temperature, pressure or mixing strength over the
surface. ZTF J203349.8+322901.1 might be the most extreme member of a class of
magnetic, transitioning white dwarfs -- together with GD 323, a white dwarf
that shows similar but much more subtle variations. This new class could help
shed light on the physical mechanisms behind white dwarf spectral evolution.Comment: 45 pages, 11 figure