The Dust cloud around the White Dwarf G 29-38. 2. Spectrum from 5-40 microns and mid-infrared variability
William T. Reach, Carey Lisse, Ted von Hippel, Fergal Mullally

TL;DR
This study models the mineral composition and distribution of dust around white dwarf G29-38 using infrared spectra, revealing a complex mineralogy with implications for the origin and structure of the dust disk.
Contribution
It provides a detailed mineralogical analysis of the dust around G29-38 and proposes a new hypothesis involving a hot Jupiter core as the debris source.
Findings
Fe-rich pyroxene is the dominant crystalline silicate.
A moderately optically thick torus model fits the spectrum well.
Fe-rich pyroxene exceeds enstatite and forsterite in abundance.
Abstract
We model the mineralogy and distribution of dust around the white dwarf G29-39 using the infrared spectrum from 1-35 microns and combining a wide range of materials based on spectral studies of comets and debris disks. In order of their contribution to the mid-infrared emission, the most abundant minerals for G29-38 are amorphous carbon, amorphous and crystalline silicates, water ice, and metal sulfides. The amorphous C can be equivalently replaced by other materials (like metallic Fe) with featureless infrared spectra. The best-fitting crystalline silicate is Fe-rich pyroxene. In order to absorb enough starlight to power the observed emission, the disk must either be much thinner than the stellar radius (so that it can be heated from above and below) or it must have an opening angle wider than 2 degrees. A `moderately optically thick' torus model with mass 2x10^19 g fits the spectrum…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
