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White dwarfs : historical remarks -Sirius = binary system (Bessel, 1844) -Mass of Sirius B : M = 0.94 M⊙ (1910) -Temperature of Sirius B (“white”) : Teff = 8 000 K (Adams, 1914) It leads R = 18 000 km, ρ = 7 104 g/cm3 (Moderne values : Teff = 24 000 K , R = 2000 km , ρ = 6 107 g/cm3 ) - Eddington 1926 : “we have a star of a mass about equal to the sun and a radius much less than Uranus [...] it seems likely that the ordinary failure of the gas laws due to finite sizes of molecules will occur at these high densities, and I do not suppose that the white dwarfs behave like perfect gas.” White dwarfs : historical remarks Sirius : Original Herzsprung-Russell diagram (1914) -Sirius A = the brightest star in the sky after the Sun Bright MacDonald Observatory -Binary system (Bessel, 1844) Blue -Sirius B : Chandra 40 Eri Faint Red White dwarfs : historical remarks - Fermi-Dirac statistics (Dirac, 1926) - White dwarfs : gravity is balanced by the pressure of degenerate electrons (Fowler, 1926) - Relativistic corrections to the EOS (Chandrasekhar, 1930) It leads to a maximum mass Mmax ~ 1.4 M⊙ - Chandrasekhar 1934 : “the life history of a star of small mass must be essentially different from the life history of a star of large mass. For a star of small mass the natural white-dwarf stage is an initial step towards complete extinction. A star of large mass cannot pass into the white-dwarf stage and one is left speculating on other possibilities.” - A simple argument in favor of the Chandrasekhar mass MCh (Landau, 1932) - Correction for general relativity (Kaplan, 1949) - Realistic EOS (Schatzman 1956,1958 - Harrison & Wheeler 1958) - Modern questions : stability, cooling, ... White dwarfs : EOS Degenerate fermions at T=0, i.e. T << TF Fermi temperature : White dwarfs : EOS Non-relativistic and ultra-relativistic limits : Shapiro & Teukolsky, chapitre 2 White dwarfs : realistic EOS Polytropes Polytropes γ n xmax (-x2y’)max Radius and mass R = 1.122×104 (ρc/106 g.cm-3)-1/6 (μe/2)-5/6 km 5/3 3/2 3.65375 2.71406 M = 0.4964 (ρc/106 g.cm-3)1/2 (μe/2)-5/2 M⊙ = 0.7011 (R/104 km)-3 (μe/2)-5 M⊙ R = 3.347×104 (ρc/106 g.cm-3)-1/3 (μe/2)-2/3 km 4/3 3 6.89685 2.01824 M = 1.457 (μe/2)2 M⊙ Mass / Radius / Central density of white dwarfs Dashed line : polytropes 5/3 and 4/3 Solid line : E.O.S. of the perfect gas of degenerate electrons at T=0 Observations : the effective temperature Spectral type : - as for normal stars with a ‘D’ in front of O, B, A, ... - 80% of white dwarfs : DA (neutral hydrogen, Balmer lines ; 6 000-30 000 K) - 20% : DC (no line in the visible ; <11 000 K); DB (HeI; 11 000 - 28 000 K); DO (HeII; 45 000 - 120 000 K). - Special types with heavy elements (DQ, DZ) : accretion from the ISM ? Bergeron et al. 1992 Effective temperature : - Model of the atmosphere of the white dwarf - Bonus : an estimate of the surface gravity from the shape of Balmer lines Koester et al 2001 (VLT; UVES) Observations : the effective temperature Observations : mass and radius Mass - Binaries (Kepler laws) - Gravitational redshift : Δλ/λ~Ξ Sirius B : Adams 1925 6.3×10-5 with Hα line (modern value ~3×10-4 in good agreement with M/R) - Asteroseismology (stellar pulsations) Bergeron et al. 1992 Radius - Parallax : we get L, and then R via Teff Shapiro & Teukolsky, chapitre 2 Mass - radius Shapiro & Teukolsky, chapitre 2 Mass - central density Provencal et al. 1998 Mass - radius (Hipparcos) Madej et al. 1994 Mass - radius (SDSS) Madej et al. 1994 Mass distribution of white dwarfs (SDSS) Shapiro & Teukolsky, chapitre 2 HR diagram Prada 2002 Cooling of white dwarfs Salaris et al. 1997 Cooling of white dwarfs