1,066 research outputs found
The True Incidence of Magnetism among Field White Dwarfs
We study the incidence of magnetism in white dwarfs from three large and
well-observed samples of hot, cool, and nearby white dwarfs in order to test
whether the fraction of magnetic degenerates is biased, and whether it varies
with effective temperature, cooling age, or distance. The magnetic fraction is
considerably higher for the cool sample of Bergeron, Ruiz, and Leggett, and the
Holberg, Oswalt, and Sion sample of local white dwarfs that it is for the
generally-hotter white dwarfs of the Palomar Green Survey. We show that the
mean mass of magnetic white dwarfs in this survey is 0.93 solar masses or more,
so there may be a strong bias against their selection in the magnitude-limited
Palomar Green Survey. We argue that this bias is not as important in the
samples of cool and nearby white dwarfs. However, this bias may not account for
all of the difference in the magnetic fractions of these samples.
It is not clear that the magnetic white dwarfs in the cool and local samples
are drawn from the same population as the hotter PG stars. In particular, two
or threee of the cool sample are low-mass white dwarfs in unresolved binary
systems. Moreover, there is a suggestion from the local sample that the
fractional incidence may increase with decreasing temperature, luminosity,
and/or cooling age. Overall, the true incidence of magnetism at the level of 2
megagauss or greater is at least 10%, and could be higher. Limited studies
capable of detecting lower field strengths down to 10 kilogauss suggest by
implication that the total fraction may be substantially higher than 10%.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, Astronomical Journal in press -- Jan 2003 issu
A comparison of numerical techniques for determining the parameters of distributed RC networks
Numerical techniques for modeling distributed RC network
On the Nature of the Peculiar Hot Star in the Young LMC Cluster NGC1818
The blue star reported in the field of the young LMC cluster NGC1818 by Elson
et al. (1998) has the wrong luminosity and radius to be a "luminous white
dwarf" member of the cluster. In addition, unless the effective temperature
quoted by the authors is a drastic underestimate, the luminosity is much too
low for it to be a cluster member in the post-AGB phase. Other possibilities,
including that of binary evolution, are briefly discussed. However, the
implication that the massive main sequence turnoff stars in this cluster can
produce white dwarfs (instead of neutron stars) from single-star evolution
needs to be reconsidered.Comment: 5 pages, no figures, Ap J Letters in pres
On the Spectral Evolution of Cool, Helium-Atmosphere White Dwarfs: Detailed Spectroscopic and Photometric Analysis of DZ Stars
We present a detailed analysis of a large spectroscopic and photometric
sample of DZ white dwarfs based on our latest model atmosphere calculations. We
revise the atmospheric parameters of the trigonometric parallax sample of
Bergeron, Leggett, & Ruiz (12 stars) and analyze 147 new DZ white dwarfs
discovered in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The inclusion of metals and
hydrogen in our model atmosphere calculations leads to different atmospheric
parameters than those derived from pure helium models. Calcium abundances are
found in the range from log (Ca/He) = -12 to -8. We also find that fits of the
coolest objects show peculiarities, suggesting that our physical models may not
correctly describe the conditions of high atmospheric pressure encountered in
the coolest DZ stars. We find that the mean mass of the 11 DZ stars with
trigonometric parallaxes, = 0.63 Mo, is significantly lower than that
obtained from pure helium models, = 0.78 Mo, and in much better agreement
with the mean mass of other types of white dwarfs. We determine hydrogen
abundances for 27% of the DZ stars in our sample, while only upper limits are
obtained for objects with low signal-to-noise ratio spectroscopic data. We
confirm with a high level of confidence that the accretion rate of hydrogen is
at least two orders of magnitude smaller than that of metals (and up to five in
some cases) to be compatible with the observations. We find a correlation
between the hydrogen abundance and the effective temperature, suggesting for
the first time empirical evidence of a lower temperature boundary for the
hydrogen screening mechanism. Finally, we speculate on the possibility that the
DZA white dwarfs could be the result of the convective mixing of thin
hydrogen-rich atmospheres with the underlying helium convection zone.Comment: 67 pages, 32 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Identification of 13 DB + dM and 2 DC + dM binaries from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We present the identification of 13 DB + dM binaries and 2 DC + dM binaries
from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Before the SDSS only 2 DB + dM
binaries and 1 DC + dM binary were known. At least three, possibly 8, of the
new DB + dM binaries seem to have white dwarf temperatures well above 30000 K
which would place them in the so called DB-gap. Finding these DB white dwarfs
in binaries may suggest that they have formed through a different evolutionary
channel than the ones in which DA white dwarfs transform into DB white dwarfs
due to convection in the upper layers.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Discovery of photospheric argon in very hot central stars of planetary nebulae and white dwarfs
We report the first discovery of argon in hot evolved stars and white dwarfs.
We have identified the ArVII 1063.55A line in some of the hottest known
(Teff=95000-110000 K) central stars of planetary nebulae and (pre-) white
dwarfs of various spectral type. We determine the argon abundance and compare
it to theoretical predictions from stellar evolution theory as well as from
diffusion calculations. We analyze high-resolution spectra taken with the Far
Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer. We use non-LTE line-blanketed model
atmospheres and perform line-formation calculations to compute synthetic argon
line profiles. We find a solar argon abundance in the H-rich central star
NGC1360 and in the H-deficient PG1159 star PG1424+535. This confirms stellar
evolution modeling that predicts that the argon abundance remains almost
unaffected by nucleosynthesis. For the DAO-type central star NGC7293 and the
hot DA white dwarfs PG0948+534 and REJ1738+669 we find argon abundances that
are up to three orders of magnitude smaller than predictions of calculations
assuming equilibrium of radiative levitation and gravitational settling. For
the hot DO white dwarf PG1034+001 the theoretical overprediction amounts to one
dex. Our results confirm predictions from stellar nucleosynthesis calculations
for the argon abundance in AGB stars. The argon abundance found in hot white
dwarfs, however, is another drastic example that the current state of
equilibrium theory for trace elements fails to explain the observations
quantitatively.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Zeeman tomography of magnetic white dwarfs. II, The quadrupole-dominated magnetic field of HE 1045-0908
We report time-resolved optical flux and circular polarization spectroscopy of the magnetic DA white dwarf HE 1045−0908 obtained with FORS1 at the ESO VLT. Considering published results, we estimate a likely rotational period of P rot 2.7 h, but cannot exclude values as high as about 9 h. Our detailed Zeeman tomographic analysis reveals a field structure which is dominated by a quadrupole and contains additional dipole and octupole contributions, and which does not depend strongly on the assumed value of the period. A good fit to the Zeeman flux and polarization spectra is obtained if all field components are centred and inclinations of their magnetic axes with respect to each other are allowed for. The fit can be slightly improved if an offset from the centre of the star is included. The prevailing surface field strength is 16 MG, but values between 10 and ∼ 75 MG do occur. We derive an effective photospheric temperature of HE 1045−0908 of T eff = 10 000 ± 1000 K. The tomographic code makes use of an extensive database of pre-computed Zeeman spectra (Paper I)
A Comprehensive Spectroscopic Analysis of DB White Dwarfs
We present a detailed analysis of 108 helium-line (DB) white dwarfs based on
model atmosphere fits to high signal-to-noise optical spectroscopy. We derive a
mean mass of 0.67 Mo for our sample, with a dispersion of only 0.09 Mo. White
dwarfs also showing hydrogen lines, the DBA stars, comprise 44% of our sample,
and their mass distribution appears similar to that of DB stars. As in our
previous investigation, we find no evidence for the existence of low-mass (M <
0.5 Mo) DB white dwarfs. We derive a luminosity function based on a subset of
DB white dwarfs identified in the Palomar-Green survey. We show that 20% of all
white dwarfs in the temperature range of interest are DB stars, although the
fraction drops to half this value above Teff ~ 20,000 K. We also show that the
persistence of DB stars with no hydrogen features at low temperatures is
difficult to reconcile with a scenario involving accretion from the
interstellar medium, often invoked to account for the observed hydrogen
abundances in DBA stars. We present evidence for the existence of two different
evolutionary channels that produce DB white dwarfs: the standard model where DA
stars are transformed into DB stars through the convective dilution of a thin
hydrogen layer, and a second channel where DB stars retain a helium-atmosphere
throughout their evolution. We finally demonstrate that the instability strip
of pulsating V777 Her white dwarfs contains no nonvariables, if the hydrogen
content of these stars is properly accounted for.Comment: 74 pages including 30 figures, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Analysis of hydrogen-rich magnetic white dwarfs detected in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We model the structure of the surface magnetic fields of the hydrogen-rich
white dwarfs in the SDSS. We have calculated a grid of state-of-the-art
theoretical optical spectra of hydrogen-rich magnetic white dwarfs with
magnetic field strengths between 1 MG and 1200 MG for different angles, and for
effective temperatures between 7000 K and 50000 K. We used a least-squares
minimization scheme with an evolutionary algorithm in order to find the
magnetic field geometry best fitting the observed data. We used simple centered
dipoles or dipoles which were shifted along the dipole axis to model the
coadded SDSS fiber spectrum of each object. We have analysed the spectra of all
known magnetic DAs from the SDSS (97 previously published plus 44 newly
discovered) and also investigated the statistical properties of magnetic field
geometries of this sample. The total number of known magnetic white dwarfs
already more than tripled by the SDSS and more objects are expected from a more
systematic search. The magnetic fields span a range between ~1 and 900 MG. Our
results further support the claim that Ap/Bp population is insufficient in
generating the numbers and field strength distributions of the observed MWDs,
and either another source of progenitor types or binary evolution is needed.
Moreover clear indications for non-centered dipoles exist in about ~50% of the
objects which is consistent with the magnetic field distribution observed in
Ap/Bp stars.Comment: 15 pages, accepted for publication in A&A. For online version with
full appendix figures, see
http://www.ari.uni-heidelberg.de/mitarbeiter/bkulebi/papers/12570_online.pd
Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS Observations of T Dwarfs: Brown Dwarf Multiplicity and New Probes of the L/T Transition
We present the results of a Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS imaging survey of
22 T-type field brown dwarfs. Five are resolved as binary systems with angular
separations of 0"05-0"35, and companionship is established on the basis of
component F110W-F170M colors (indicative of CH4 absorption) and low
probabilities of background contamination. Prior ground-based observations show
2MASS 1553+1532AB to be a common proper motion binary. The properties of these
systems - low multiplicity fraction (11[+7][-3]% resolved, as corrected for
sample selection baises), close projected separations (a = 1.8-5.0 AU) and
near-unity mass ratios - are consistent with previous results for field brown
dwarf binaries. Three of the binaries have components that span the
poorly-understood transition between L dwarfs and T dwarfs. Spectral
decomposition analysis of one of these, SDSS 1021-0304AB, reveals a peculiar
flux reversal between its components, as its T5 secondary is ~30% brighter at
1.05 and 1.27 micron than its T1 primary. This system, 2MASS 0518-2828AB and
SDSS 1534+1615AB all demonstrate that the J-band brightening observed between
late-type L to mid-type T dwarfs is an intrinsic feature of this spectral
transition, albeit less pronounced than previously surmised. We also find that
the resolved binary fraction of L7 to T3.5 dwarfs is twice that of other L and
T dwarfs, an anomaly that can be explained by a relatively rapid evolution of
brown dwarfs through the L/T transition, perhaps driven by dynamic
(nonequilibrium) depletion of photospheric condensates.Comment: ~40 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication to ApJ. Note that
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