Literature DB >> 35003618

How Sublimation Delays the Onset of Dusty Debris Disk Formation Around White Dwarf Stars.

Jordan K Steckloff1,2, John Debes3, Amy Steele3,4, Brandon Johnson5,6, Elisabeth R Adams1, Seth A Jacobson7, Alessondra Springmann8.   

Abstract

Although numerous white dwarf stars host dusty debris disks, the temperature distribution of these stars differs significantly from the white dwarf population as a whole. Dusty debris disks exist exclusively around white dwarfs cooler than 27,000 K. This is all the more enigmatic given that the formation processes of dusty debris disks should favor younger, hotter white dwarfs, which likely host more dynamically unstable planetary systems. Here we apply a sophisticated material sublimation model to white dwarf systems to show that these statistics are actually a natural result of the interplay of thermal and tidal forces, and show how they define the circumstellar regions where dusty debris disks can form. We demonstrate that these processes tend to prevent stability against both sublimative destruction and reaccretion into planetesimals for rocky materials until white dwarfs cool to below ~25,000-32,000 K, in agreement with the observed limit of ~27,000 K. For pure water ice, this critical temperature is less than 2,700 K (requiring a cooling age older the universe); this precludes pure water ice-rich debris disks forming through the accepted two-step mechanism. The critical temperature is size-dependent; more massive white dwarfs could potentially host dusty debris disks at warmer temperatures.. Our model suggests that the location of the disks within the PG 0010+280, GD 56, GD 362, and PG 1541+651 systems are consistent with a forsterite-dominated olivine composition. We also find that very cool white dwarfs may simultaneously host multiple, independently formed dusty debris disks, consistent with observations of the LSPM J0207+3331 system.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 35003618      PMCID: PMC8740607          DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/abfd39

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Astrophys J Lett        ISSN: 2041-8205            Impact factor:   7.413


  3 in total

1.  Origin of Saturn's rings and inner moons by mass removal from a lost Titan-sized satellite.

Authors:  Robin M Canup
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2010-12-12       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Evidence for water in the rocky debris of a disrupted extrasolar minor planet.

Authors:  J Farihi; B T Gänsicke; D Koester
Journal:  Science       Date:  2013-10-11       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  A planetesimal orbiting within the debris disc around a white dwarf star.

Authors:  Christopher J Manser; Boris T Gänsicke; Siegfried Eggl; Mark Hollands; Paula Izquierdo; Detlev Koester; John D Landstreet; Wladimir Lyra; Thomas R Marsh; Farzana Meru; Alexander J Mustill; Pablo Rodríguez-Gil; Odette Toloza; Dimitri Veras; David J Wilson; Matthew R Burleigh; Melvyn B Davies; Jay Farihi; Nicola Gentile Fusillo; Domitilla de Martino; Steven G Parsons; Andreas Quirrenbach; Roberto Raddi; Sabine Reffert; Melania Del Santo; Matthias R Schreiber; Roberto Silvotti; Silvia Toonen; Eva Villaver; Mark Wyatt; Siyi Xu; Simon Portegies Zwart
Journal:  Science       Date:  2019-04-05       Impact factor: 47.728

  3 in total

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