1 / 18

Spectroscopic Analysis of the mid-IR excesses of WDs

Spectroscopic Analysis of the mid-IR excesses of WDs. Jana Bilikova 1 You- Hua Chu 1 , Kate Su 2 , Robert Gruendl 1, et al. 1 U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2 U. of Arizona . Spitzer MIPS 24 μm Survey of Hot WDs WD Name PN T eff ( kK ) F 24 (mJy) L IR /L *

mort
Download Presentation

Spectroscopic Analysis of the mid-IR excesses of WDs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Spectroscopic Analysis of the mid-IR excesses of WDs Jana Bilikova1 You-Hua Chu1, Kate Su2, Robert Gruendl1, et al. 1U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2U. of Arizona

  2. Spitzer MIPS 24 μm Survey of Hot WDs WD Name PN Teff(kK) F24(mJy) LIR/L* K1-22 K1-22 141 1.07 3.1 E-5 NGC 2438 NGC 2438 114 12.4 4.5 E-4 WD 0103+732 EGB 1 150 2.76 1.3 E-5 WD 0109+111 110 0.27 4.9 E-6 WD 0127+581 Sh2-188 102 0.34 2.7 E-5 WD 0439+466 Sh2-216 95 0.98 3.7 E-6 WD 0726+133 Abell 21 130 0.92 1.6 E-5 WD 0950+139 EGB 6 110 11.7 2.6 E-4 WD 1342+443 79 0.22 4.0 E-5 WD 2226-210 Helix 110 48.0 2.5 E-4

  3. Spitzer Archival search • Serchfor CSPNs with IR excess • 60 PNe examined • 18 photometry carried out • 6 show IR excess: NGC 6804, NGC 7139 • NGC 2438, NGC 2346, NGC 6853, NGC 6905

  4. Mid-IR emission of hot WDs

  5. Possible Origins of IR Excesses • Collisions of KBOs • Binary evolution • Compact nebulosity in born-again PNe

  6. KPNO EchelleSpectra EGB 6 NGC 2438 EGB 1 Abell 30 [OIII] Hα • H-poor: feature in [OIII] does not show up in Hα • All [OIII] features show Hαcounterparts • Can eliminate the compact H-poor nebulosity scenario

  7. Our dust disk model • Optically thin • Dust grains - silicates/amorphous carbon - sizes: n(a) ~ a-3.5 - amin set by β=Frad/Fg of 0.5 (Artymowicz & Clampin 1997) - Qabs from Mie theory • Uniform surface density

  8. WD 0439+466 • The closest CSPN Sh2-216 • D=129 pc (Harris et al. 2007) 5’ 40’’

  9. Sh 2-216 model Teff = 95,000 K log g = 6.9 M = 0.55 M L = 160 L (Rauch et al. 2007) amin ~ 40-80 um R~ 60-100 AU M = 0.001 Mearth

  10. CSPN K1-22 2’’ 40’’ • HST has resolved a companion at 0.35’’ (~450 AU) from the CSPN (Ciardullo 1999). • D = 1.33 kpc (Ciardullo 1999)

  11. CSPN K1-22 model [O IV] [Ne III] Teff = 141,000 K log g = 6.73 M = 0.59 M (Rauch et al. 1999) L = 325 L (phot) Kurucz model atm. Teff = 5,000 K M0V star amin ~ 250 um R~sublim - 40 AU M = 0.002 Mearth

  12. WD 0103+732 Distance = 650 pc (Napiwotzki 2001)

  13. WD 0103+732 model Teff = 147,000 K log g = 7.34 M = 0.65 M (Napiwotzki 2001) L = 480 L (phot) amin ~ 340 um R~ 200 - 360 AU M = 0.14 Mearth

  14. Beware! • Detailed spectral shape of the WD matters - model atmospheres have more UV emission  hotter grains  disk properties - e.g. WD 0103+732: ~480 Lsun,Rin ~ 200 AU ~1000 Lsun, Rin ~ 500 AU • Distance matters - dist+phot LWD amin disk properties - e.g. K1-22: d=1.33 kpc, L~300 Lsun d=3.4 kpc, L~1000 Lsun • More complicatons

  15. WD 0950+139 (EGB 6) KPNO echelle • Compact emission line source coincident with • the CSPN (Fleming, Liebert, Green 1986) • JHK excess (Fulbright & Liebert 1993) • HST: A companion 0.18 ‘’ away (Bond 1994) • IRAC, MIPS excess • Featureless spectrum Su et al., in prep.

  16. CSPN NGC 6804 Spitzer MIPS 24 um Gemini NIRI+Michelle • Central emission line source • Dust continuum, rising from J band • We also see a silicate feature at 10 um.

  17. ORIGINS • KBO collisions • Inner and outer edge (~100 AU) • Small dust mass (~0.1 Mearth) • Not too far for collisions (Dong et al.,Bonsor & Wyatt) • Post-AGB binaries • Some CSPNs are binaries (maybe others hide a companion?) • CSPN stage right after post-AGB (do post-AGB binaries evolve into PNe?)

  18. Conclusions • Near and mid-IR excess is a good indicator of interesting phenomena • Great variety among IR excesses • Near-IR excess only, mid-IR excess only, both • No emission lines, only emission lines, both • Featureless dust continuum, mineralogical features • Known companions, no companions • Each needs to be studied in detail individually • Stellar atmospheric models • Stay tuned!

More Related