No Arabic abstract
As they evolve, white dwarfs undergo major changes in surface composition, a phenomenon known as spectral evolution. In particular, some stars enter the cooling sequence with helium atmospheres (type DO) but eventually develop hydrogen atmospheres (type DA), most likely through the upward diffusion of residual hydrogen. Our empirical knowledge of this process remains scarce: the fractions of white dwarfs that are born helium-rich and that experience the DO-to-DA transformation are poorly constrained. We tackle this issue by performing a detailed model-atmosphere investigation of 1806 hot ($T_{rm eff} ge 30,000$ K) white dwarfs observed spectroscopically by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We first introduce our new generations of model atmospheres and theoretical cooling tracks, both appropriate for hot white dwarfs. We then present our spectroscopic analysis, from which we determine the atmospheric and stellar parameters of our sample objects. We find that $sim$24% of white dwarfs begin their degenerate life as DO stars, among which $sim$2/3 later become DA stars. We also infer that the DO-to-DA transition occurs at substantially different temperatures ($75,000 {rm K} > T_{rm eff} > 30,000$ K) for different objects, implying a broad range of hydrogen content within the DO population. Furthermore, we identify 127 hybrid white dwarfs, including 31 showing evidence of chemical stratification, and we discuss how these stars fit in our understanding of the spectral evolution. Finally, we uncover significant problems in the spectroscopic mass scale of very hot ($T_{rm eff} > 60,000$ K) white dwarfs.
There is a striking paucity of hydrogen-rich (DA) white dwarfs (WDs) relative to their hydrogen-deficient (non-DA) counterparts at the very hot end of the WD cooling sequence. The three hottest known DAs (surface gravity log g $geq$ 7.0) have effective temperatures around Teff = 140,000 K, followed by only five objects in the range 104,000 - 120,000 K. They are by far outnumbered by forty non-DAs with Teff = 100,000 - 250,000 K, giving a DA/non-DA ratio of 0.2. In contrast, this ratio is the inverse of that for the cooler WDs. One reason for this discrepancy could be uncertainties in the temperature determination of hot DAs using Balmer-line spectroscopy. Recent investigations involving metal-ionization balances in ultraviolet (UV) spectra indeed showed that the temperatures of some DAs were underestimated, but the paucity of extremely hot DAs prevailed. Here we present the results of a UV spectral analysis of one of the three hottest DAs, PG0948+534. We find that its temperature was strongly overestimated by recent Balmer line analyses. We correct it downward to 105,000 $pm$ 5000 K, aggravating the hot-DA paucity. The Balmer-line problem encountered previously is not resolved by our non-LTE line-blanketed model atmospheres. We speculate that it might be related to the possible presence of a magnetosphere. This is supported by the V-band variability that shows a period of P=3.45 d (amplitude 0.19 mag), which we interpret as the stars rotation period. The metal abundances in PG0948+534 are affected by atomic diffusion and we conclude that the onset of diffusion in hot DAs occurs when they cool below Teff about 105,000 K. We discuss the possibility that the paucity of very hot DAs is a consequence of their fast evolutionary rate.
To calculate realistic models of objects with Ni in their atmospheres, accurate atomic data for the relevant ionization stages needs to be included in model atmosphere calculations. In the context of white dwarf stars, we investigate the effect of changing the Ni {sc iv}-{sc vi} bound-bound and bound-free atomic data has on model atmosphere calculations. Models including PICS calculated with {sc autostructure} show significant flux attenuation of up to $sim 80$% shortward of 180AA, in the EUV region compared to a model using hydrogenic PICS. Comparatively, models including a larger set of Ni transitions left the EUV, UV, and optical continua unaffected. We use models calculated with permutations of this atomic data to test for potential changes to measured metal abundances of the hot DA white dwarf G191-B2B. Models including {sc autostructure} PICS were found to change the abundances of N and O by as much as $sim 22$% compared to models using hydrogenic PICS, but heavier species were relatively unaffected. Models including {sc autostructure} PICS caused the abundances of N/O {sc iv} and {sc v} to diverge. This is because the increased opacity in the {sc autostructure} PICS model causes these charge states to form higher in the atmosphere, moreso for N/O {sc v}. Models using an extended line list caused significant changes to the Ni {sc iv}-{sc v} abundances. While both PICS and an extended line list cause changes in both synthetic spectra and measured abundances, the biggest changes are caused by using {sc autostructure} PICS for Ni.
We use the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 12, which is the largest available white dwarf catalog to date, to study the evolution of the kinematical properties of the population of white dwarfs in the Galactic disc. We derive masses, ages, photometric distances and radial velocities for all white dwarfs with hydrogen-rich atmospheres. For those stars for which proper motions from the USNO-B1 catalog are available the true three-dimensional components of the stellar space velocity are obtained. This subset of the original sample comprises 20,247 objects, making it the largest sample of white dwarfs with measured three-dimensional velocities. Furthermore, the volume probed by our sample is large, allowing us to obtain relevant kinematical information. In particular, our sample extends from a Galactocentric radial distance $R_{rm G}=7.8$~kpc to 9.3~kpc, and vertical distances from the Galactic plane ranging from $Z=-0.5$~kpc to 0.5~kpc. We examine the mean components of the stellar three-dimensional velocities, as well as their dispersions with respect to the Galactocentric and vertical distances. We confirm the existence of a mean Galactocentric radial velocity gradient, $partiallangle V_{rm R}rangle/partial R_{rm G}=-3pm5$~km~s$^{-1}$~kpc$^{-1}$. We also confirm North-South differences in $langle V_{rm z}rangle$. Specifically, we find that white dwarfs with $Z>0$ (in the North Galactic hemisphere) have $langle V_{rm z}rangle<0$, while the reverse is true for white dwarfs with $Z<0$. The age-velocity dispersion relation derived from the present sample indicates that the Galactic population of white dwarfs may have experienced an additional source of heating, which adds to the secular evolution of the Galactic disc.
The importance to stellar evolution of understanding the metal abundances in hot white dwarfs is well known. Previous work has found the hot DA white dwarfs REJ 1032+532, REJ 1614-085 and GD 659 to have highly abundant, stratified photospheric nitrogen, due to the narrow absorption line profiles of the FUV N V doublet and the lack of EUV continuum absorption. A preliminary analysis of the extremely narrow, deep line profiles of the photospheric metal absorption features of PG 0948+534 suggested a similar photospheric metal configuration. However, other studies have found REJ 1032+532, REJ 1614-085 and GD 659 can be well described by homogeneous models, with nitrogen abundances more in keeping with those of white dwarfs with higher effective temperatures. Here, a re-analysis of the nitrogen absorption features seen in REJ 1032+532, REJ 1614-085 and GD 659 is presented, with the aim of better understanding the structure of these stars, to test which models better represent the observed data and apply the results to the line profiles seen in PG 0948+534. A degeneracy is seen in the modelling of the nitrogen absorption line profiles of REJ 1032+532, REJ 1614-085 and GD 659, with low abundance, homogeneously distributed nitrogen models most likely being a better representation of the observed data. In PG 0948+534, no such degeneracy is seen, and the enigmatically deep line profiles could not be modelled satisfactorially.
We report the discovery of a new class of hydrogen-deficient stars: white dwarfs with an atmosphere primarily composed of carbon, with little or no trace of hydrogen or helium. Our analysis shows that the atmospheric parameters found for these stars do not fit satisfactorily in any of the currently known theories of post-asymptotic giant branch (AGB) evolution, although these objects might be the cooler counter-part of the unique and extensively studied PG 1159 star H1504+65. These stars, together with H1504+65, might thus form a new evolutionary post-AGB sequence.