1 / 22

Variability & Rotation in Magnetic White Dwarfs

Variability & Rotation in Magnetic White Dwarfs. Katherine Lawrie. Matt Burleigh, Carolyn Brinkworth (Spitzer Science Center) & Tom Marsh (Warwick). 17 th European White Dwarf Workshop August 17, 2010. Outline. Brief introduction on rotation periods

alden
Télécharger la présentation

Variability & Rotation in Magnetic White Dwarfs

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. Variability & Rotation in Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie Matt Burleigh, Carolyn Brinkworth (Spitzer Science Center) & Tom Marsh (Warwick) 17th European White Dwarf Workshop August 17, 2010

  2. Outline • Brief introduction on rotation periods • Previous work by Carolyn Brinkworth & Motivation • Results from LT • Current work on SDSS MWDs with INT Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  3. Introduction Photometric Variability • Rotation period measured by variable photometric or circular polarization measurements. • HFMWDs changes in magnetic field & structure with rotation. • Cool MWDs (T<12000K) variation attributed to star spots (Brinkworth et al. 2004, 2005). Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  4. Introduction Rotation Periods • Rotation velocities estimated from H line in spectroscopic measurements. • Generally provides upper limits. • Berger et al (2005) used the Ca II K line and measured rotation velocities ~<10 km/s . Only possible for rare metal rich DAZ white dwarfs. • Rotation velocities consistent with rotation periods of MWDs. Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  5. Previous Work & Motivation • Wickramasinghe & Ferrario 2000 noted 16/65 single MWDs with periodic variability between 12 m to 17 d • Some MWDs suspected to have periods ~decades to ~100y • Brinkworth et al 2007 searched for short term variability (hrs to weeks) in 34 MWDs and found: • 5 displaying strong variability and clear periods • 12 displaying strong variability but undefined periods • 15 with weak evidence for variability • 2 not varying Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  6. Previous Work & Motivation • Wickramasinghe & Ferrario 2000 noted 16/65 single MWDs with periodic variability between 12 m to 17 d • Some MWDs suspected to have periods ~decades to ~100y • Brinkworth et al 2007 searched for short term variability (hrs to weeks) in 34 MWDs and found: • 5 displaying strong variability and clear periods • 12 displaying strong variability but undefined periods • 15 with weak evidence for variability • 2 not varying Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  7. Previous Work & Motivation • G240-72 • B 100 MG, T=5590 K • Suggested to have • P 100 years • (Angel, Landstreet & Borra 1981) Normalised Differential Flux HJD-52000 (day) Courtesy C. Brinkworth Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  8. Introduction Correlations with physical parameters Weak negative correlation between known periods & magnetic field strength. No correlation found between periods and temperature, mass or age. Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  9. Observations • 10 targets observed with the 2m robotic Liverpool Telescope between March 2005 & January 2007. • Searched for long term photometric variability in: • suspected long period variables (months - years) from Brinkworth et al. 2007 • suggested long term variables (years - decades) from literature http://www.schoolsobservatory.org.uk/obs/lt/ Robotic Liverpool Telescope Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  10. Results Grw+70 8247 • B=320 MG, T=12070 K • Thought to be a very slow rotator with P 100 years • Constant fit • No variability found Agrees with very slow rotator hypothesis. Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  11. Results G240-72 target/comp1+3 • B 100 MG, T=5590 K • Suggested to have a period 100 years (Angel et al 1981) • Brinkworth et al (2007) noted change in flux of ~2.5% over several months • Constant fit comp1/comp3 ~4.5% variability ~1.5% variability Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  12. Results G240-72 56.3 d • Two peaks detected in CLEAN periodogram - 56.3 d & 16.3 d • Peaks also detected in Scargle periodogram • Neither peak in analysis of comparison stars CLEAN 16.3 d Scargle Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  13. Results G240-72 • Period of 56±2 days • Sinusoid fit • FAP=0.04±0.02 • Period of 16.3±0.2days • Sinusoid fit Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  14. Results G240-72 fake light curve simulations • Variety of periods with varying amplitudes recovered Flat + noise added P=56 d 56 d 20 d Scargle 16.3 d Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  15. Results G227-28 ~3% variability target/comp3+4 • B 0.1 MG, T=4780 K • 2% difference in flux noted by Brinkworth et al (2007) over several months. • Constant fit • Variability in comparisons is quite large. comp3/comp4 ~2% variability Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  16. Results G227-28 • Best fitting period of 16±0.3 days • Sinusoid fit • FAP=0.31±0.05 • 16 d period not in CLEAN • Also strong peak at 67±7 d CLEAN 16 d? 16 d 67 d 34 d Scargle Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  17. Results G227-28 • Best fitting period of 16±0.3 days • Sinusoid fit • FAP=0.31±0.05 • 16 d period not in CLEAN • Also strong peak at 67±7 d CLEAN 16 d? Folded on 16d 16 d 67 d 34 d Scargle Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  18. Results G227-28 • Best fitting period of 16±0.3 days • Sinusoid fit • FAP=0.31±0.05 • 16 d period not in CLEAN • Also strong peak at 67±7 d CLEAN 16 d? Folded on 16d Folded on 67d Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  19. Next… MWDs from SDSS • Search for short term variability (hrs-1wk) in MWDs selected from SDSS. • 26 Sloan MWDs observed using INT in 3 runs from March 2009 - 2010. Targets for follow-up to determine periods. WD0003-103 light curve in r-band taken at INT Oct 2009 Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  20. Results LHS 5064 • B 0.2 MG, T=6680K • Best-fitting period of 7.7±0.8 d • Sinusoid fit • Constant fit • FAP=0.02±0.01 Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  21. Summary Correlations with physical parameters Weak negative correlation between period & magnetic field strength. Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

  22. Conclusions • Periodic variability possibly found in 2 out of the 10 targets - G240-72 & G227-28. • Could not reliably detect below the ±1-2% level. • Weak negative correlation between period & magnetic field strength, but need more data! • Using INT data to search for short term variability in SDSS MWDs & follow up (eg. LHS5064). Magnetic White Dwarfs Katherine Lawrie

More Related