A Study of Cool White Dwarfs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 12
Abstract
In this work we study white dwarfs where 30\,000\,K > Teff > 5\,000\,K to compare the differences in the cooling of DAs and non-DAs and their formation channels. Our final sample is composed by nearly 13\,000 DAs and more than 3\,000 non-DAs that are simultaneously in the SDSS DR12 spectroscopic database and in the Gaia survey DR2. We present the mass distribution for DAs, DBs and DCs, where it is found that the DCs are 0.15\,M more massive than DAs and DBs on average. Also we present the photometric effective temperature distribution for each spectral type and the distance distribution for DAs and non-DAs. In addition, we study the ratio of non-DAs to DAs as a function of effective temperature. We find that this ratio is around 0.075 for effective temperature above 22\,000\,K and increases by a factor of five for effective temperature cooler than 15\,000\,K. If we assume that the increase of non-DA stars between 22\,000\,K to 15\,000\,K is due to convective dilution, 143 per cent of the DAs should turn into non-DAs to explain the observed ratio. Our determination of the mass distribution of DCs also agrees with the theory that convective dilution and mixing are more likely to occur in massive white dwarfs, which supports evolutionary models and observations suggesting that higher mass white dwarfs have thinner hydrogen layers.
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