Asteroseismology of pulsating low-mass white dwarf stars
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Date
2024Author
Advisor
Academic level
Doctorate
Type
Title alternative
Astrossismologia de estrelas anãs brancas pulsantes de baixa massa
Subject
Abstract in Portuguese (Brasil)
White dwarf stars are the most common final stage of stellar evolution, corresponding to 99% of all stars in the Galaxy. Around 10% of white dwarfs in the solar neighbourhood are low-mass (< 0.45M⊙) objects. In the case of low-mass white dwarfs, up to 70% of them are in binary systems. The total number of stars in such systems increases to 100% when extremely low-mass white dwarfs are considered. The pulsating low-mass white dwarf stars have stellar masses between 0.30 M⊙ and 0.45 M⊙ and show p ...
White dwarf stars are the most common final stage of stellar evolution, corresponding to 99% of all stars in the Galaxy. Around 10% of white dwarfs in the solar neighbourhood are low-mass (< 0.45M⊙) objects. In the case of low-mass white dwarfs, up to 70% of them are in binary systems. The total number of stars in such systems increases to 100% when extremely low-mass white dwarfs are considered. The pulsating low-mass white dwarf stars have stellar masses between 0.30 M⊙ and 0.45 M⊙ and show photometric variability due to gravity-mode pulsations. Within this mass range, they can harbour both a helium- and hybrid-core, depending if the progenitor experienced helium-core burning during the prewhite dwarf evolution. The eclipsing binary system SDSS J115219.99+024814.4 is composed of two low-mass white dwarfs with stellar masses of 0.362±0.014 M⊙ and 0.325±0.013 M⊙. The less massive component is a pulsating star, showing at least three pulsation periods of ∼1314 s, ∼1069 s, and ∼582.9 s. This opens the way to use asteroseismology as a tool to uncover its inner chemical structure, in combination with the information obtained using the light-curve modeling of the eclipses. By means of binary evolutionary models leading to helium- and hybrid-core white dwarfs, we computed adiabatic pulsations for ℓ = 1 and ℓ = 2 gravity modes with GYRE. We found that the pulsating component of the SDSS J115219.99+024814.4 system must have a hydrogen envelope thinner than the value obtained from binary evolution computations, independently of the inner composition. Finally, from our asteroseismological study, we find a best fit model characterised by Teff = 10 917 K, M=0.338 M⊙, MH = 10−6 M⊙ with the inner composition of a hybrid white dwarf. ...
Institution
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul. Instituto de Física. Programa de Pós-Graduação em Física.
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Exact and Earth Sciences (5143)Physics (832)
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