Intermediate-mass Stars Become Magnetic White Dwarfs
Abstract
When a star exhausts its nuclear fuel, it either explodes as a supernova or more quiescently becomes a white dwarf, an object about half the mass of our Sun with a radius of about that of the Earth. About one-fifth of white dwarfs exhibit the presence of magnetic fields, whose origin has long been debated as either the product of previous stages of evolution or of binary interactions. We here report the discovery of two massive and magnetic white-dwarf members of young star clusters in the Gaia second data release (DR2) database, while a third massive and magnetic cluster white dwarf was already reported in a previous paper. These stars are most likely the product of single-star evolution and therefore challenge the merger scenario as the only way to produce magnetic white dwarfs. The progenitor masses of these stars are all above 5 solar masses, and there are only two other cluster white dwarfs whose distances have been unambiguously measured with Gaia and whose progenitors' masses fall in this range. This high incidence of magnetic white dwarfs indicates that intermediate-mass progenitors are more likely to produce magnetic remnants and that a fraction of magnetic white dwarfs forms from intermediate-mass stars.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- September 2020
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2009.03374
- Bibcode:
- 2020ApJ...901L..14C
- Keywords:
-
- Young star clusters;
- Open star clusters;
- White dwarf stars;
- DA stars;
- DB stars;
- Magnetic stars;
- Magnetic fields;
- Stellar evolution;
- Stellar magnetic fields;
- 1833;
- 1160;
- 1799;
- 348;
- 358;
- 995;
- 994;
- 1599;
- 1610;
- Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 11 pages, 7 figures. Accepted by ApJ Letters