Back to Search Start Over

New Observational Evidence of Flash Mixing on the White Dwarf Cooling Curve

Authors :
Brown, Thomas M.
Lanz, Thierry
Sweigart, Allen V.
Cracraft, Misty
Hubeny, Ivan
Landsman, Wayne B.
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
arXiv, 2012.

Abstract

Blue hook stars are a class of subluminous extreme horizontal branch stars that were discovered in UV images of the massive globular clusters omega Cen and NGC 2808. These stars occupy a region of the HR diagram that is unexplained by canonical stellar evolution theory. Using new theoretical evolutionary and atmospheric models, we have shown that the blue hook stars are very likely the progeny of stars that undergo extensive internal mixing during a late helium-core flash on the white dwarf cooling curve. This "flash mixing" produces hotter-than-normal EHB stars with atmospheres significantly enhanced in helium and carbon. The larger bolometric correction, combined with the decrease in hydrogen opacity, makes these stars appear subluminous in the optical and UV. Flash mixing is more likely to occur in stars born with a high helium abundance, due to their lower mass at the main sequence turnoff. For this reason, the phenomenon is more common in those massive globular clusters that show evidence for secondary populations enhanced in helium. However, a high helium abundance does not, by itself, explain the presence of blue hook stars in massive globular clusters. Here, we present new observational evidence for flash mixing, using recent HST observations. These include UV color-magnitude diagrams of six massive globular clusters and far-UV spectroscopy of hot subdwarfs in one of these clusters (NGC 2808).<br />Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the Fifth Meeting on Hot Subdwarf Stars and Related Objects (sdOB5), 25 - 29 July 2011, Stellenbosch, South Africa. ASP Conference Series, 10 pages, 5 figures, LaTeX

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1199b908cfa58a07187244623580071f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1201.4204