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The bright blue side of the night sky: Spectroscopic survey of bright and hot (pre-) white dwarfs

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arxiv 2307.03721 v1 pith:RD5A26HG submitted 2023-07-07 astro-ph.SR

The bright blue side of the night sky: Spectroscopic survey of bright and hot (pre-) white dwarfs

classification astro-ph.SR
keywords starsbrightderivedpossiblytargetsvariablebinaryblue
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We report on the spectroscopic confirmation of 68 new bright ($G=13.5-17.2$ mag) and blue (pre-)white dwarfs (WDs). This finding has allowed us to almost double the number of the hottest ($T_{\mathrm{eff}} \geq 60$kK) known WDs brighter than $G=16$ mag. We increased the number of known ultra-high excitation (UHE) WDs by 20%, found one unambiguous close binary system consisting of one DA WD with an irradiated low-mass companion, one DAO, and one DOA WD that are likely in their transformation phase of becoming pure DA WDs, one rare, naked O(H) star, two DA and two DAO WDs with $T_{\mathrm{eff}}$ possibly in excess of 100kK, three new DOZ WDs, and three of our targets are central stars of (possible) planetary nebulae. Using non-local thermodynamic equilibrium models, we derived the atmospheric parameters of these stars and by fitting their spectral energy distribution we derived their radii, luminosities, and gravity masses. In addition, we derived their masses in the Kiel and Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (HRD). We find that Kiel, HRD, and gravity mass agree only in half of the cases. This is not unexpected and we attribute this to the neglect of metal opacities, possibly stratified atmospheres, as well as possible uncertainties of the parallax zero point determination. Furthermore, we carried out a search for photometric variability in our targets using archival data, finding that 26% of our targets are variable. This includes 15 new variable stars, with only one of them being clearly an irradiation effect system. Strikingly, the majority of the variable stars exhibit non-sinusoidal light-curve shapes, which are unlikely explained in terms of close binary systems. We propose that a significant fraction of all (not just UHE) WDs develop spots when entering the WD cooling phase. We suggest that this could be related to the on-set of weak magnetic fields and possibly diffusion.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Physics of Eclipsing Binaries. VI. Hot, compact stars

    astro-ph.SR 2026-07 accept novelty 5.0

    PHOEBE 2.5 incorporates TMAP and Tremblay atmospheres, atmosphere blending, and derived limb-darkening tables to model hot compact stars in eclipsing binaries without blackbody fallback.