The Initial-Final Mass Relation: Direct Constraints at the Low Mass End
Jasonjot S. Kalirai, Brad M. S. Hansen, Daniel D. Kelson, David B., Reitzel, R. Michael Rich, and Harvey B. Richer

TL;DR
This study extends the initial-final mass relation to lower stellar masses using observations of white dwarfs in older open clusters, providing new empirical constraints on stellar evolution models.
Contribution
It presents the first direct constraints on the low mass end of the initial-final mass relation using spectroscopic data from white dwarfs in older clusters.
Findings
The relation continues to lower masses down to 1.16 Msun initial stars.
A fourfold increase in the number of stars with known mass loss can be analyzed.
Discovery of diverse white dwarf systems including magnetic and binary white dwarfs.
Abstract
The initial-final mass relation represents a mapping between the mass of a white dwarf remnant and the mass that the hydrogen burning main-sequence star that created it once had. The relation thus far has been constrained using a sample of ~40 stars in young open clusters, ranging in initial mass from ~2.75 -- 7 Msun, and shows a general trend that connects higher mass main-sequence stars with higher mass white dwarfs. In this paper, we present CFHT/CFH12K photometric and Keck/LRIS multiobject spectroscopic observations of a sample of 22 white dwarfs in two older open clusters, NGC 7789 (t = 1.4 Gyr) and NGC 6819 (t = 2.5 Gyr). We measure masses for the highest S/N spectra by fitting the Balmer lines to atmosphere models and place the first direct constraints on the low mass end of the initial-final mass relation. Our results indicate that the observed general trend at higher masses…
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