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White Dwarf Spectra and Atmospheres

White Dwarf Spectra and Atmospheres. Tala Monroe A540 Stellar Atmospheres Apr. 6, 2005. Outline. History Current Classification Scheme Spectra Atmospheres Spectral Evolution Future Work. History. Bessell (1844)-variability in proper motions of Sirius and Procyon  dark companions

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White Dwarf Spectra and Atmospheres

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  1. White Dwarf Spectra and Atmospheres Tala Monroe A540 Stellar Atmospheres Apr. 6, 2005

  2. Outline • History • Current Classification Scheme • Spectra • Atmospheres • Spectral Evolution • Future Work

  3. History • Bessell (1844)-variability in proper motions of Sirius and Procyondark companions • Clark (1861) visually sighted Sirius B • Schaeberle (1896) Lick Obs. announced Procyon’s companion • 40 Eri (faint white and red stars) • Class A0, Russell dismissed when 1st Russell diagram published • Adams confirmed A-type • Adams (1915)-Sirius B spectrum Type A0 • Eddington (1924) Mass-Luminosity Relationship • Coined “white dwarfs” for 1st time • Deduced mass and radius of Sirius B density=53,000x water • Fowler (1926) WDs supported by electron degeneracy pressure, not thermal gas pressure • Chandrasekhar (early 1930s) worked out details of white dwarf structure, predicted upper mass limit of 1.44 Msun, & found mass-radius relation

  4. Early Classifications • Kuiper (mid-1930s, Lick Obs.) WDs found in increasing numbers • 1941 introduced 1st WD classification scheme • w in front of spectral type and Con stars • Luyten (1921) proper motion studies from faint blue star surveys • 1952 presented new scheme for 44 WDs • D for true degeneracy, followed by A, B, C, or F • Greenstein (1958) introduced new scheme • 9 types

  5. Current ClassificationsSion (et al. 1983) • ~2200 WDs w/in ~500 pc of Sun • D=degenerate • Second Letter-primary spectroscopic signature in optical • DA-Hydrogen lines (5000K<Teff<80000K) • DB-He I lines (Teff<30000K) • DC-Continuous spectrum (Teff<11,000K) • DZ-Metal lines (Mg, Ca, Fe) • DQ-Atomic/Molecular carbon features • DO-He II lines (Teff>45,000K) • Additional letters indicate increasingly weaker or secondary features, e.g. DAZ, DQAB • P-polarized magnetic, H-non-polarized magnetic, V-variable • Teff indicated by digit at end; 50,400/Teff, e.g. DA4.5 • New class Teff<4000K, IR absorption for CIA by H2

  6. DB Spectra DA Spectra Rapid settling of elements heavier than H in high log g

  7. DQ Stars & Spectra • Helium-rich stars, generally characterized by C2-Swan bands • Hotter DQs have C I

  8. ZZ Ceti PG 1159 Spectra • Features due to CNO ions, Teff>100,000K • Absence of H or He I features; He II, C IV, O VI

  9. Magnetic WDs • About 5% of field white dwarfs display strong magnetism • 3 classes of H-atmosphere MWDs based on field strength • He-atmosphere MWDs have unique features

  10. Basic Picture • 75% DA, 25% non-DA • Spectral classification provides info about principal constituent, with some T info • Progenitors: Post-AGB stars, central stars of planetary nebulae (CSPN), hot subdwarfs • Expected structure-stratified object with <M>~0.6Msun • C-O core, He-rich envelope, H-rich shell • O-Ne cores-most massive • Atmosphere contains <10-14 M • Many WDs have pure H or He atmospheres • Thicknesses of H and He

  11. Mechanisms in Atmosphere • Gravitational diffusion • Convection • Radiative levitation • Magnetism • Accretion • Wind-loss • T-sensitive  T determines chemical abundances

  12. Effects of Mechanisms • Diffusion & Settling • Gravitational separation leads to pure envelope of lightest element t<108 yr • But, observations show traces of heavier elements • radiative levitation • Cooler WDs result of recent accretion event • Radiative Levitation T>40kK • Radiative acceleration on heavy elements • Convection for T<12kK • Convection zone forms and increases inward as star cools • For He envelopes, convection begins at high T • Mixing changes surface composition • Need to couple models of atmospheres and interiors

  13. Statistics • T>45kK DA far outnumber DO • Ratio increases to about 30kK (diffusion) • DB gap in 45k-30kK range • Float up of H • Always enough H to form atmosphere? • Dredge up of He • T<30kK He convection zone massive engulfs outer H layer if thin • 30kK-12kK 25% stars revert to DB spectral type (edge of ZZ Ceti Strip) • Convection zone increases as T decreases. At T~11kK, numbers of DAs and non-DAs are ~equal (ZZ Ceti Strip) • ‘Non-DA gap’ for 5000-6000K dearth of He atmospheres

  14. Spectral Evolution • Gapsindividual WDs undergo spectral evolution • Compositions change, DADBDA, as T changes • Evolution of convection zone? Accretion? • Explanation of ‘non-DA gap’-opacity? Bergeron et al. • Low opacity of He I means small amounts of H dominates opacity • H- atomic energy levels destroyed when H added to dense atmosphere-reduces H opacity contribution • Must accrete a lot of H to make difference in photospheric conditionsDA (fixes 6000K edge) • Re-appearance of DBs at 5000K b/c convection zone grows, H is diluted with additional He • This fails! Destruction of H- bound level produces free e-, which provide opacity

  15. ZZ Ceti Cooling Evolution

  16. Model Atmospheres • Plane-parallel geometry • Hydrostatic equilibrium (mass loss rates) • NLTE • Stratisfied Atmospheres • Parameters: degree of ionization, intensity of radiation field • Make radiative cross sections of each element depth dependent • Convection • Parameters of Mixing Length theory

  17. Future/Active Work • Exact masses of H and He layers • Thin or Thick Envelopes • Explanations for DB-gap • Explanations for ‘non-DA gap’ • DAs outnumber He-rich WDs, yet progenitor PNN have ~equal numbers of H- and He-rich stars. What rids degenerates of He? • Couple core & atmosphere models

  18. References • Dreizler, S. 1999, RvMA, 12, 255D • Fontaine et al. 2001, PASP, 113, 409 • Hansen, B. 2004, Physics Reports, 399, 1 • Hansen, B & Liebert, J. 2003 ARA&A, 41, 465 • Hearnshaw, J.B. 1986, The Analysis of Starlight. • Koester, D. & Chanmugam, G. 1990, RPPh, 53, 837K • Shipman, H. 1997, White Dwarfs, p. 165. Kluwer • Wesemael et al. 1993, PASP, 105, 761

  19. DA Stars • 5,000-80,000K • Heavily broadened Balmer lines • Strongest near 12,000K at log g~8 (DA4) • No other features in optical spectrum • Rapid settling of elements heavier than H in high log g • Underabundances of elements by at least 1/100 • Higher dispersion revealed traces of helium in a few-DAO (HeII) and DAB (HeI)

  20. DO Stars • Spectra dominated by He II • Teff >45,000 K • 2 subclasses • Cool (Teff~45-70,000K), very strong l4686, also He I features • Hot (Teff>80,000K), only l4686 • At Teff <30,000K, He II can no longer be detected, only see He I

  21. DO Spectra

  22. DB Stars • Classical DB stars have rich spectra of He I in optical, with nothing else • Coolest DB stars merge with He-rich DQ stars • Many DBs have H, metals (Ca II), and carbon (C I and C2)

  23. DZ Stars & Spectra • He-rich stars to cool to show He I, below (DB5-9000K) still show metal features • Ca I, Ca II H and K, Mg I, Fe I, Na I

  24. PG 1159 Stars • Features due to CNO ions, Teff>100,000K • Absence of H or He I features; He II, C IV, O VI • 3 groups • A: Cooler Teff~100,000K, He II, C IV, O VI • E: Teff~140,000K, emission cores, He II, C IV, O VI, some have N V (DOQZ1) • lgE: Low g central stars of planetary nuclei • Characteristic emission cores, narrower absorption features

  25. DC Stars & Spectra • Featureless, no line deeper than 5% of continuum • Higher resolution reveals weak features • Many reclassified as DB or DA • True DCs remain, among coolest WDs, Teff < 11,000 K

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