This is an illustration of a white dwarf star merging
into a red giant star. A bow shock forms as the dwarf plunges through the
star’s outer atmosphere. The passage strips down the white dwarf’s outer
layers, exposing an interior carbon core.
Artwork: NASA, ESA, STScI, Ralf Crawford (STScI)
An international team of astronomers has
discovered a cosmic rarity: an ultra-massive white dwarf star resulting from a
white dwarf merging with another star, rather than through the evolution of a
single star. This discovery, made by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope’s
sensitive ultraviolet observations, suggests these rare white dwarfs may be
more common than previously suspected.
“It's a discovery that underlines things
may be different from what they appear to us at first glance,” said the
principal investigator of the Hubble program, Boris Gaensicke, of the
University of Warwick in the United Kingdom. “Until now, this appeared as a
normal white dwarf, but Hubble's ultraviolet vision revealed that it had a very
different history from what we would have guessed.”
A white dwarf is a dense object with the
same diameter as Earth, and represents the end state for stars that are not
massive enough to explode as core-collapse supernovae. Our Sun will become a
white dwarf in about 5 billion years.
In theory, a white dwarf can have a mass
of up to 1.4 times that of the Sun, but white dwarfs heavier than the Sun are
rare. These objects, which astronomers call ultra-massive white dwarfs, can
form either through the evolution of a single massive star or through the
merger of a white dwarf with another star, such as a binary companion.
This new discovery, published in the
journal Nature Astronomy, marks the first
time that a white dwarf born from colliding stars has been identified by its
ultraviolet spectrum. Prior to this study, six white dwarf merger products were discovered
via carbon lines in their visible-light spectra. All seven of these are
part of a larger group that were found to be bluer than expected for their
masses and ages from a study with ESA’s Gaia mission in 2019, with the evidence of mergers providing new insights into their
formation history.
Astronomers used Hubble’s Cosmic Origins Spectrograph to investigate a white dwarf called WD 0525+526. Located 128
light-years away, it is 20% more massive than the Sun. In visible light, the
spectrum of WD 0525+526’s atmosphere resembled that of a typical white dwarf.
However, Hubble’s ultraviolet spectrum revealed something unusual: evidence of
carbon in the white dwarf’s atmosphere.
White dwarfs that form through the
evolution of a single star have atmospheres composed of hydrogen and helium.
The core of the white dwarf is typically composed mostly of carbon and oxygen
or oxygen and neon, but a thick atmosphere usually prevents these elements from
appearing in the white dwarf’s spectrum.
When carbon appears in the spectrum of a white dwarf, it can signal a more violent origin than the typical single-star scenario: the collision of two white dwarfs, or of a white dwarf and a subgiant star. Such a collision can burn away the hydrogen and helium atmospheres of the colliding stars, leaving behind a scant layer of hydrogen and helium around the merger remnant that allows carbon from the white dwarf’s core to float upward, where it can be detected.
WD 0525+526 is remarkable even within
the small group of white dwarfs known to be the product of merging stars. With
a temperature of almost 21,000 kelvins (37,000 degrees Fahrenheit) and a mass
of 1.2 solar masses, WD 0525+526 is hotter and more massive than the other
white dwarfs in this group.
WD 0525+526’s extreme temperature posed
something of a mystery for the team. For cooler white dwarfs, such as the six
previously discovered merger products, a process called convection can mix
carbon into the thin hydrogen-helium atmosphere. WD 0525+526 is too hot for
convection to take place, however. Instead, the team determined a more subtle
process called semi-convection brings a small amount of carbon up into WD
0525+526’s atmosphere. WD 0525+526 has the smallest amount of atmospheric
carbon of any white dwarf known to result from a merger, about 100,000 times
less than other merger remnants.
The high temperature and low carbon
abundance mean that identifying this white dwarf as the product of a merger
would have been impossible without Hubble’s sensitivity to ultraviolet light.
Spectral lines from elements heavier than helium, like carbon, become fainter
at visible wavelengths for hotter white dwarfs, but these spectral signals
remain bright in the ultraviolet, where Hubble is uniquely positioned to spot
them.
“Hubble's Cosmic Origins Spectrograph is
the only instrument that can obtain the superb quality ultraviolet spectroscopy
that was required to detect the carbon in the atmosphere of this white dwarf,”
said study lead Snehalata Sahu from the University of Warwick.
Because WD 0525+526’s origin was
revealed only once astronomers glimpsed its ultraviolet spectrum, it’s likely
that other seemingly “normal” white dwarfs are actually the result of cosmic
collisions — a possibility the team is excited to explore in the future.
“We would like to extend our research on
this topic by exploring how common carbon white dwarfs are among similar white
dwarfs, and how many stellar mergers are hiding among the normal white dwarf
family,” said study co-leader Antoine Bedrad from the University of Warwick.
“That will be an important contribution to our understanding of white dwarf
binaries, and the pathways to supernova explosions.”
To learn more about Hubble, visit: https://science.nasa.gov/hubble
Source: NASA's Hubble Uncovers Rare White Dwarf Merger Remnant - NASA Science

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