No evidence for a strong decrease of planetesimal accretion in old white dwarfs

Author:

Blouin Simon1ORCID,Xu (许偲艺) Siyi2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2, Canada

2. Gemini Observatory/NSF’s NOIRLab, 670 N. A’ohoku Place, Hilo, HI 96720, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT A large fraction of white dwarfs are accreting or have recently accreted rocky material from their planetary systems, thereby ‘polluting’ their atmospheres with elements heavier than helium. In recent years, the quest for mechanisms that can deliver planetesimals to the immediate vicinity of their central white dwarfs has stimulated a flurry of modelling efforts. The observed time evolution of the accretion rates of white dwarfs through their multi-Gyr lifetime is a crucial test for dynamical models of evolved planetary systems. Recent studies of cool white dwarf samples have identified a significant decrease of the mass accretion rates of cool, old white dwarfs over Gyr time-scales. Here, we revisit those results using updated white dwarf models and larger samples of old polluted H- and He-atmosphere white dwarfs. We find no compelling evidence for a strong decrease of their time-averaged mass accretion rates for cooling times between 1 and 8 Gyr. Over this period, the mass accretion rates decrease by no more than a factor of the order of 10, which is one order of magnitude smaller than the decay rate found in recent works. Our results require mechanisms that can efficiently and consistently deliver planetesimals inside the Roche radius of white dwarfs over at least 8 Gyr.

Funder

CITA

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

European Space Agency

Johns Hopkins University

Durham University

University of Edinburgh

Queen's University Belfast

Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

National Central University

Space Telescope Science Institute

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Science Foundation

University of Maryland

Eotvos Lorand University

Los Alamos National Laboratory

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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