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Properties of the Eclipsing Double-White Dwarf Binary NLTT 11748

Authors :
Kaplan, David L.
Marsh, Thomas R.
Walker, Arielle N.
Bildsten, Lars
Bours, Madelon C. P.
Breedt, Elmé
Copperwheat, Chris M.
Dhillon, Vik S.
Howell, Steve B.
Littlefair, Stuart P.
Shporer, Avi
Steinfadt, Justin D. R.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

We present high-quality ULTRACAM photometry of the eclipsing detached double-white dwarf binary NLTT 11748. This system consists of a carbon/oxygen white dwarf and an extremely-low mass (< 0.2 Msun) helium-core white dwarf in a 5.6 hr orbit. To date such extremely-low mass WDs, which can have thin, stably-burning outer layers, have been modeled via poorly-constrained atmosphere and cooling calculations where uncertainties in the detailed structure can strongly influence the eventual fates of these systems when mass-transfer begins. With precise (individual precision ~1%) high-cadence (~2 s) multi-color photometry of multiple primary and secondary eclipses spanning >1.5 yr, we constrain the masses and radii of both objects in the NLTT 11748 system to a statistical uncertainty of a few percent. However, we find that overall uncertainty in the thickness of the envelope of the secondary carbon/oxygen white dwarf leads to a larger (~13%) systematic uncertainty in the primary He WD's mass. Over the full range of possible envelope thicknesses we find that our primary mass (0.136-0.162 Msun) and surface gravity (log(g)=6.32-6.38; radii are 0.0423-0.0433 Rsun) constraints do not agree with previous spectroscopic determinations. We use precise eclipse timing to detect the Romer delay at 7 sigma significance, providing an additional weak constraint on the masses and limiting the eccentricity to e*cos(omega)= -4e-5 +/- 5e-5. Finally, we use multi-color data to constrain the secondary's effective temperature (7600+/-120 K) and cooling age (1.6-1.7 Gyr).<br />Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. ApJ, in press. Minor typographical corrections in v2

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1311.6831
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/780/2/167