4.7 Article

Partly burnt runaway stellar remnants from peculiar thermonuclear supernovae

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 489, Issue 2, Pages 1489-1508

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stz1618

Keywords

stars: individual: LP 40-365; subdwarfs; supernovae: general; white dwarfs; Galaxy: kinematics and dynamics

Funding

  1. German Science Foundation (DFG) [HE1356/71-1, IR190/1-1]
  2. NASA - Space Telescope Science Institute [HST-HF2-51357.001-A]
  3. NASA [NAS5-26555, NAS 5-26555]
  4. DFG [GE 2056-12-1]
  5. Packard Foundation
  6. European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [677706 (WD3D)]
  7. European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP/20072013)/ERC [320964]
  8. UK STFC grant [ST/P000495]
  9. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
  10. U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science
  11. Center for High Performance Computing at the University of Utah
  12. [15431]
  13. [093.D-0431]
  14. [097.D-1029]
  15. [0101.C-0646]
  16. [W/2017A/25]
  17. [W/2017A/30]
  18. [SW2017a12]
  19. STFC [ST/P000495/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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We report the discovery of three stars that, along with the prototype LP 40-365, form a distinct class of chemically peculiar runaway stars that are the survivors of thermonuclear explosions. Spectroscopy of the four confirmed LP 40-365 stars finds ONe-dominated atmospheres enriched with remarkably similar amounts of nuclear ashes of partial O- and Si-burning. Kinematic evidence is consistent with ejection from a binary supernova progenitor; at least two stars have rest-frame velocities indicating they are unbound to the Galaxy. With masses and radii ranging between 0.20 and 0.28M(circle dot) and between 0.16 and 0.60 R-circle dot, respectively, we speculate these inflated white dwarfs are the partly burnt remnants of either peculiar Type Iax or electron-capture supernovae. Adopting supernova rates from the literature, we estimate that similar to 20 LP 40-365 stars brighter than 19 mag should be detectable within 2 kpc from the Sun at the end of the Gaia mission. We suggest that as they cool, these stars will evolve in their spectroscopic appearance, and eventually become peculiar O-rich white dwarfs. Finally, we stress that the discovery of new LP 40-365 stars will be useful to further constrain their evolution, supplying key boundary conditions to the modelling of explosion mechanisms, supernova rates, and nucleosynthetic yields of peculiar thermonuclear explosions.

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