The Future is Now: the Formation of Single Low Mass White Dwarfs in the Solar Neighborhood
Mukremin Kilic, K. Z. Stanek, and M. H. Pinsonneault (Ohio State)

TL;DR
This paper presents evidence that many low mass white dwarfs in the field originate from single, metal-rich stars experiencing severe mass loss, challenging the view that they are solely formed through binary interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a new formation channel for low mass white dwarfs from single stars, supported by population analysis and observational evidence in the field.
Findings
A significant fraction of low mass white dwarfs lack companions.
Old metal-rich stars can produce low mass white dwarfs without binary interactions.
The population estimates align with theoretical models.
Abstract
Low mass helium-core white dwarfs (M < 0.45 Msun) can be produced from interacting binary systems, and traditionally all of them have been attributed to this channel. However, a low mass white dwarf could also result from a single star that experiences severe mass loss on the first ascent giant branch. A large population of low mass He-core white dwarfs has been discovered in the old metal-rich cluster NGC 6791. There is therefore a mechanism in clusters to produce low mass white dwarfs without requiring binary star interactions, and we search for evidence of a similar population in field white dwarfs. We argue that there is a significant field population (of order half of the detected systems) that arises from old metal rich stars which truncate their evolution prior to the helium flash from severe mass loss. There is a consistent absence of evidence for nearby companions in a large…
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