X-Ray Emission from Isolated Hot White Dwarfs
Abstract
Hot white dwarfs are objects that copiously emit in the Extreme Ultraviolet and soft X-ray range. They are the brightest sources seen in the Low Energy Telescope of EXOSAT, with countrates up to 25 cnts/s. in contrast to their optical and UV spectrum the total flux and spectral distribution at soft X-ray energies are highly sensitive to the effective temperature, structure and elemental composition of the dwarf's atmosphere. The imaging soft X-ray experiments onboard EXOSAT cover with large sensitivity the spectral region where the peak of emission of hot white dwarfs is expected to occur. I here review some of the (preliminary) results obtained so far with broadband X-ray photometry on a dozen or so white dwarfs, and some of the high-resolution spectra obtained for three white dwarfs with the grating spectrometers.
- Publication:
-
Space Science Reviews
- Pub Date:
- February 1985
- DOI:
- 10.1007/BF00212870
- Bibcode:
- 1985SSRv...40...79H
- Keywords:
-
- Emission Spectra;
- Hot Stars;
- Stellar Spectrophotometry;
- White Dwarf Stars;
- X Ray Spectra;
- Exosat Satellite;
- Spaceborne Astronomy;
- Spectral Energy Distribution;
- Spectrum Analysis;
- Stellar Composition;
- Stellar Structure;
- Stellar Temperature;
- Astrophysics