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We obtain new and precise information on the double white dwarf (DWD) population and on its gravitational-wave-driven merger rate, by combining the constraints on the DWD population from two previous radial-velocity-variation studies: One based on a sample of white dwarfs (WDs) from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS, which with its low spectral resolution probes systems at separations a<0.05 au), and one based on the ESO-VLT Supernova-Ia Progenitor surveY (SPY, which, with high spectral resolution, is sensitive to a<4 au). From a joint likelihood analysis, the DWD fraction among WDs is fbin=0.095+/-0.020 (1-sigma, random) +0.010 (systematic) in the separation range ~<4 au. The index of a power-law distribution of initial WD separations (at the start of solely gravitational-wave-driven binary evolution), N(a)da ~ a^alpha da, is alpha=-1.30+/-0.15 (1-sigma) +0.05 (systematic). The Galactic WD merger rate per WD is R_merge=(9.7+/-1.1)e-12 /yr. Integrated over the Galaxy lifetime, this implies that 8.5-11 per cent of all WDs ever formed have merged with another WD. If most DWD mergers end as more-massive WDs, then some 10 per cent of WDs are DWD-merger products, consistent with the observed fraction of WDs in a high-mass bump in the WD mass function. The DWD merger rate is 4.5-7 times the Milky Ways specific Type-Ia supernova (SN Ia) rate. If most SN Ia explosions stem from the mergers of some DWDs (say, those with massive-enough binary components) then ~15 per cent of all WD mergers must lead to a SN Ia.
From a sample of spectra of 439 white dwarfs (WDs) from the ESO-VLT Supernova-Ia Progenitor surveY (SPY), we measure the maximal changes in radial-velocity (DRVmax) between epochs (generally two epochs, separated by up to 470d), and model the observe
Double white dwarf (double-WD) binaries may merge within a Hubble time and produce high-mass WDs. Compared to other high-mass WDs, the double-WD merger products have higher velocity dispersion because they are older. With the power of Gaia data, we s
We use multi-epoch spectroscopy of about 4000 white dwarfs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to constrain the properties of the Galactic population of binary white dwarf systems and calculate their merger rate. With a Monte Carlo code, we model the dis
We present Chandra and Swift X-ray observations of four extremely low-mass (ELM) white dwarfs with massive companions. We place stringent limits on X-ray emission from all four systems, indicating that neutron star companions are extremely unlikely a
Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) play a crucial role as standardizable cosmological candles, though the nature of their progenitors is a subject of active investigation. Recent observational and theoretical work has pointed to merging white dwarf binaries