Radial Pulsations in DB White Dwarfs?
Abstract
Theoretical models of DB white dwarfs are unstable against radial pulsation at effective temperatures near 20,000-30,000 K. Many high-overtone modes are unstable, with periods ranging from 12 s down to the acoustic cutoff period of approximately 0.1 s. The blue edge for radial instability lies at slightly higher effective temperatures than for nonradial pulsations, with the temperature of the blue edge dependent on the assumed efficiency of convection. Models with increased convective efficiency have radial blue edges that are increasingly closer to the nonradial blue edge; in all models the instability persists into the nonradial instability strip. Radial pulsations therefore may exist in the hottest DB stars that lie below the DB gap; the greatest chance for detection would be observations in the ultraviolet. These models also explain why searches for radial pulsations in DA white dwarfs have failed: the efficient convection needed to explain the blue edge for nonradial DA pulsation means that the radial instability strip is 1000 K cooler than found in previous investigations. The multiperiodic nature of the expected pulsations can be used to advantage to identify very low amplitude modes using the uniform spacing of the modes in frequency. This frequency spacing is a direct indicator of the mass of the star.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- February 1993
- DOI:
- 10.1086/172279
- Bibcode:
- 1993ApJ...404..294K
- Keywords:
-
- Stellar Models;
- Stellar Oscillations;
- White Dwarf Stars;
- Adiabatic Conditions;
- Asymptotic Methods;
- Photosphere;
- Stellar Evolution;
- Stellar Temperature;
- Astrophysics;
- STARS: OSCILLATIONS;
- STARS: WHITE DWARFS