Wide Post-common Envelope Binaries from Gaia: Orbit Validation and Formation Models
Astrometry from Gaia DR3 has enabled the discovery of a sample of 3000+ binaries containing white dwarfs (WD) and main-sequence (MS) stars in relatively wide orbits, with orbital periods P orb = (100–1000) days. This population was not predicted by binary population synthesis models before Gaia and—...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 2024-08, Vol.136 (8), p.84202 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Astrometry from Gaia DR3 has enabled the discovery of a sample of 3000+ binaries containing white dwarfs (WD) and main-sequence (MS) stars in relatively wide orbits, with orbital periods P orb = (100–1000) days. This population was not predicted by binary population synthesis models before Gaia and—if the Gaia orbits are robust—likely requires very efficient envelope ejection during common envelope evolution (CEE). To assess the reliability of the Gaia solutions, we measured multi-epoch radial velocities (RVs) of 31 WD+MS binary candidates with P orb = (40–300) days and AstroSpectroSB1 orbital solutions. We jointly fit the RVs and astrometry, allowing us to validate the Gaia solutions and tighten constraints on component masses. We find a high success rate for the Gaia solutions, with only 2 out of the 31 systems showing significant discrepancies between their Gaia orbital solutions and our RVs. Joint fitting of RVs and astrometry allows us to directly constrain the secondary-to-primary flux ratio S , and we find S ≲ 0.02 for most objects, confirming the companions are indeed WDs. We tighten constraints on the binaries’ eccentricities, finding a median e ≈ 0.1. These eccentricities are much lower than those of normal MS+MS binaries at similar periods, but much higher than predicted for binaries formed via stable mass transfer. We present MESA single and binary evolution models to explore how the binaries may have formed. The orbits of most binaries in the sample can be produced through CEE that begins when the WD progenitor is an AGB star, corresponding to initial separations of 2–5 au. Roughly 50% of all post-common envelope binaries are predicted to have first interacted on the AGB, ending up in wide orbits like these systems. |
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ISSN: | 0004-6280 1538-3873 |
DOI: | 10.1088/1538-3873/ad6809 |