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SDSS J163030.58+423305.8: A 40 minute Orbital Period Detached White Dwarf Binary

Authors :
Kilic, Mukremin
Brown, Warren R.
Hermes, J. J.
Prieto, Carlos Allende
Kenyon, S. J.
Winget, D. E.
Winget, K. I.
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
arXiv, 2011.

Abstract

We report the discovery of a new detached, double white dwarf system with an orbital period of 39.8 min. We targeted SDSS J163030.58+423305.8 (hereafter J1630) as part of our radial velocity program to search for companions around low-mass white dwarfs using the 6.5m MMT. We detect peak-to-peak radial velocity variations of 576 km/s. The mass function and optical photometry rule out main-sequence companions. In addition, no milli-second pulsar companions are detected in radio observations. Thus the invisible companion is most likely another white dwarf. Unlike the other 39 min binary SDSS J010657.39-100003.3, follow-up high speed photometric observations of J1630 obtained at the McDonald 2.1m telescope do not show significant ellipsoidal variations, indicating a higher primary mass and smaller radius. The absence of eclipses constrain the inclination angle to 0.3 Msun invisible secondary, at a separation of >0.32 Rsun. The two white dwarfs will merge in less than 31 Myr. Depending on the core composition of the companion, the merger will form either a single core-He burning subdwarf star or a rapidly rotating massive white dwarf. The gravitational wave strain from J1630 is detectable by instruments like the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) within the first year of operation.<br />MNRAS Letters, in press

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0cb9de904a4dbc5b250992b31818338
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1109.6339