4.7 Article

New insight into the magnetism of degenerate stars from the analysis of a volume-limited sample of white dwarfs

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 507, Issue 4, Pages 5902-5951

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab2046

Keywords

polarization; stars: magnetic field; white dwarfs

Funding

  1. La Silla Paranal Observatory [0101.D-0103, 0103.D-0029, 0104.D-0298]
  2. ESPaDOnS on the CFHT [15BC05, 16AC05, 16BC01, 17AC01, 18AC06]
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [6377-2016]

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After observing 152 white dwarfs within 20 pc of the Sun for magnetic fields, it was found that 33 of them have magnetic fields ranging from 40 kG to 300 MG. The frequency of magnetic field occurrence is similar across all spectral classes, with a marked deficiency in younger white dwarfs and a higher frequency in those that have undergone core crystallization. The strength of the magnetic field does not appear to decay over time.
Many stars evolve into magnetic white dwarfs (MWDs), and observations may help to understand when the magnetic field appears at the stellar surface, if and how it evolves during the cooling phase, and, above all, what are the mechanisms that generate it. After obtaining new spectropolarimetric observations and combining them with previous literature data, we have checked almost the entire population of about 152 WDs within 20 pc from the Sun for the presence of magnetic fields, with a sensitivity that ranges from better than 1 kG for most of the stars of spectral class DA, to 1 MG for some of the featureless white dwarfs (WDs). We find that 33 WDs of the local 20 pc volume are magnetic. Statistically, the data are consistent with the possibility that the frequency of the magnetic field occurrence is similar in stars of all spectral classes, except that in the local 20 pc volume, either DQ stars are more frequently magnetic or host much stronger fields than average. The distribution of the observed field strength ranges from 40 kG to 300 MG and is uniform per decade, in striking contrast to the field frequency distribution resulting from spectroscopic surveys. Remarkably, no fields weaker than 40 kG are found. We confirm that magnetic fields are more frequent in WDs with higher than average mass, especially in younger stars. We find a marked deficiency of MWDs younger than 0.5 Gyr, and we find that the frequency of the occurrence of the magnetic field is significantly higher in WDs that have undergone the process of core crystallization than in WDs with fully liquid core. There is no obvious evidence of field strength decay with time. We discuss the implications of our findings in relation to some of the proposals that have been put forward to explain the origin and evolution of magnetic fields in degenerate stars, in particular those that predict the presence of a dynamo acting during the crystallization phase.

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