2015MNRAS.448..188S


Query : 2015MNRAS.448..188S

2015MNRAS.448..188S - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 448, 188-206 (2015/March-3)

Evaporation and accretion of extrasolar comets following white dwarf kicks.

STONE N., METZGER B.D. and LOEB A.

Abstract (from CDS):

Several lines of observational evidence suggest that white dwarfs receive small birth kicks due to anisotropic mass-loss. If other stars possess extrasolar analogues to the Solar Oort cloud, the orbits of comets in such clouds will be scrambled by white dwarf natal kicks. Although most comets will be unbound, some will be placed on low angular momentum orbits vulnerable to sublimation or tidal disruption. The dusty debris from these comets will manifest itself as an IR excess temporarily visible around newborn white dwarfs; examples of such discs may already have been seen in the Helix Nebula, and around several other young white dwarfs. Future observations with the James Webb Space Telescope may distinguish this hypothesis from alternatives such as a dynamically excited Kuiper Belt analogue. Although competing hypotheses exist, the observation that ≳ 15 percent of young white dwarfs possess such discs, if interpreted as indeed being cometary in origin, provides indirect evidence that low-mass gas giants (thought necessary to produce an Oort cloud) are common in the outer regions of extrasolar planetary systems. Hydrogen abundances in the atmospheres of older white dwarfs can, if sufficiently low, also be used to place constraints on the joint parameter space of natal kicks and exo-Oort cloud models.

Abstract Copyright: © 2015 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2015)

Journal keyword(s): accretion, accretion discs - comets: general - white dwarfs - infrared: stars

Simbad objects: 16

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Number of rows : 16
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 PN HDW 1 PN 01 07 07.6233410040 +73 33 23.447679408   16.308 16.439 16.452 16.482 DA 46 0
2 EGGR 901 WD* 01 12 23.0598244080 +11 23 36.100360788   15.15 15.40 15.69   DOZ.7 44 0
3 SH 2-188 PN 01 30 33.1778575512 +58 24 50.325485868   17.424 17.447 17.398 17.376 DAO.6 103 1
4 Cl Melotte 22 OpC 03 46 24.2 +24 06 50           ~ 3435 0
5 Cl Melotte 25 OpC 04 29 47.3 +16 56 53           ~ 3074 0
6 SH 2-216 PN 04 43 21.2638228056 +46 42 05.835192876   12.50 12.87 13.04   DAO.6 161 2
7 PN A66 21 PN 07 29 02.7096654192 +13 14 48.587555184   15.67 15.99     DOZ 191 0
8 NGC 2438 PN 07 41 50.5194253896 -14 44 07.470144744           ~ 285 3
9 NGC 2632 OpC 08 40 13.0 +19 37 16           ~ 1564 0
10 EGB 6 PN 09 52 58.9865875152 +13 44 34.622903256   15.692 15.999 16.137 16.300 DAO.5 96 0
11 PN K 1-22 PN 11 26 43.7671247699 -34 22 11.178770560   16.147 16.070     ~ 70 0
12 NGC 5139 GlC 13 26 47.28 -47 28 46.1           ~ 3426 0
13 PG 1342+444 WD* 13 44 26.8497569064 +44 08 33.299274192   16.15       DA.7 52 0
14 NGC 6397 GlC 17 40 42.09 -53 40 27.6     5.17     ~ 1975 0
15 V* V4334 Sgr CV* 17 52 32.69352 -17 41 08.0160           F2Ia 372 0
16 NGC 7293 PN 22 29 38.5454047152 -20 50 13.747242408 11.894 13.158 13.524 13.689 13.898 DAO.5 943 0

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