Document detail
ID

oai:arXiv.org:2406.18646

Topic
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar A... Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary... Astrophysics - Instrumentation and...
Author
Guidry, Joseph A. Hermes, J. J. De, Kishalay Rouis, Lou Baya Ould Ewing, Brison B. Kaiser, B. C.
Category

sciences: astrophysics

Year

2024

listing date

7/3/2024

Keywords
gaseous disks emission calcium planetary near-infrared white dwarfs debris variable astrophysics
Metrics

Abstract

Roughly 2% of white dwarfs harbor planetary debris disks detectable via infrared excesses, but only a few percent of these disks show a gaseous component, distinguished by their double-peaked emission at the near-infrared calcium triplet.

Previous studies found most debris disks around white dwarfs are variable at 3.4 and 4.5 $\mu$m, but they analyzed only a few of the now 21 published disks showing calcium emission.

To test if most published calcium emission disks exhibit large-amplitude stochastic variability in the near-infrared, we use light curves generated from the unWISE images at 3.4 $\mu$m that are corrected for proper motion to characterize the near-infrared variability of these disks against samples of disks without calcium emission, highly variable cataclysmic variables, and 3215 isolated white dwarfs.

We find most calcium emission disks are extremely variable: 6/11 with sufficient signal-to-noise show high-amplitude variability in their 3.4-$\mu$m light curves.

These results lend further credence to the notion that disks showing gaseous debris in emission are the most collisionally active.

Under the assumption that 3.4-$\mu$m variability is characteristic of white dwarfs with dusty debris disks, we generate a catalog of 104 high-confidence near-infrared variable white dwarfs, 84 of which are published as variable for the first time.

We do near-infrared spectroscopic follow-up of seven new candidate 3.4-$\mu$m variables, confirming at least one new remnant planetary system, and posit that empirical near-infrared variability can be a discovery engine for debris disks showing gaseous emission.

;Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures, accepted to The Astrophysical Journal.

Supplemental catalogs and light curves available at https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.12538705

Guidry, Joseph A.,Hermes, J. J.,De, Kishalay,Rouis, Lou Baya Ould,Ewing, Brison B.,Kaiser, B. C., 2024, Using 3.4-$\mu$m Variability towards White Dwarfs as a Signpost of Remnant Planetary Systems

Document

Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

An Updated Overview of Existing Cancer Databases and Identified Needs
advancements insights assess review lipidomics glycomics proteomics databases research cancer