4.7 Article

The initial-final mass relation: Direct constraints at the low-mass end

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 676, Issue 1, Pages 594-609

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/527028

Keywords

open clusters and associations : individual (NGC 6819; NGC 7789); stars : evolution; techniques : photometric; techniques : spectroscopic; white dwarfs

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The initial-final mass relation represents a mapping between the mass of a white dwarf remnant and the mass that the hydrogen-burning main-sequence star that created it once had. The empirical relation thus far has been constrained using a sample of similar to 40 stars in young open clusters, ranging in initial mass from similar to 2.75 to 7 M-circle dot, and shows a general trend that connects higher mass main-sequence stars with higher mass white dwarfs. In this paper, we present CFHT CFH12K photometric and Keck LRIS multiobject spectroscopic observations of a sample of 22 white dwarfs in two older open clusters, NGC 7789 (t = 1.4 Gyr) and NGC 6819 (t = 2.5 Gyr). We measure masses for the highest signal-to-noise ratio spectra by fitting the Balmer lines to atmosphere models and place the first direct constraints on the low-mass end of the initial-final mass relation. Our results indicate that the observed general trend at higher masses continues down to low masses, with M-initial = 1.6 M-circle dot main-sequence stars forming M-final = 0.54 M-circle dot white dwarfs. When added to our new data from the very old cluster NGC 6791, the relation is extended down to M-initial = 1.16 M-circle dot (corresponding to M-final = 0.53 M-circle dot). This extension of the relation represents a fourfold increase in the total number of hydrogen-burning stars for which the integrated mass loss can now be calculated from empirical data, assuming a Salpeter initial mass function. The new leverage at the low-mass end is used to derive a purely empirical initial-final mass relation. The sample of white dwarfs in these clusters also shows several interesting systems that we discuss further: a DB (helium) white dwarf, a magnetic white dwarf, a DAB (mixed hydrogen/helium atmosphere or a double degenerate DA+DB) white dwarf(s), and two possible equal-mass DA double degenerate binary systems.

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