Discovery of the Eclipsing Detached Double White Dwarf Binary NLTT 11748

Abstract

We report the discovery of the first eclipsing detached double white dwarf (WD) binary. In a pulsation search, the low-mass helium core WD NLTT 11748 was targeted for fast (approx 1 minute) differential photometry with the Las Cumbres Observatory's Faulkes Telescope North. Rather than pulsations, we discovered approx 180 s 3%-6% dips in the photometry. Subsequent radial velocity measurements of the primary white dwarf from the Keck telescope found variations with a semi-amplitude K1 = 271 +/- 3 km/s, and confirmed the dips as eclipses caused by an orbiting WD with a mass M2 = 0.648-0.771 Msun for M1 = 0.1-0.2 Msun. We detect both the primary and secondary eclipses during the Porb = 5.64 hr orbit and measure the secondary's brightness to be 3.5% +/- 0.3% of the primary at SDSS-g'. Assuming that the secondary follows the mass-radius relation of a cold C/O WD and including the effects of microlensing in the binary, the primary eclipse yields a primary radius of R1 = 0.043-0.039 Rsun for M1 = 0.1-0.2 Msun, consistent with the theoretically expected values for a helium core WD with a thick, stably burning hydrogen envelope. Though nearby (at approx 150 pc), the gravitational wave strain from NLTT 11748 is likely not adequate for direct detection by the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna. Future observational efforts will determine M1, yielding accurate WD mass-radius measurement of both components, as well as a clearer indication of the binary's fate once contact is reached.

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