White-Dwarf Kicks and Implications for Barium Stars
Robert G. Izzard (1,2,4), Tyl Dermine (1), Ross P. Church (3,4), ((1) Universit\'e Libre de Bruxelles, (2) University of Bonn, (3) Lund, Observatory, (4) Monash University)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how white dwarf kicks at birth and increased angular momentum loss during wind transfer can explain the observed eccentricities and periods of barium star binaries, addressing longstanding theoretical challenges.
Contribution
It introduces the idea that white dwarf kicks and enhanced angular momentum loss can resolve discrepancies in barium star orbital properties.
Findings
White dwarf kicks can induce eccentricities in binary orbits.
Enhanced angular momentum loss during wind transfer shrinks binary periods.
Possible mechanisms for kicks and their observational implications are discussed.
Abstract
The formation mechanism of the barium stars is thought to be well understood. Barium-rich material, lost in a stellar wind from a thermally-pulsing asymptotic-giant branch star in a binary system, is accreted by its companion main-sequence star. Now, many millions of years later, the primary is an unseen white dwarf and the secondary has itself evolved into a giant which displays absorption lines of barium in its spectrum and is what we call a barium star. A similar wind-accretion mechanism is also thought to form the low-metallicity CH and carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars. Qualitatively the picture seems clear but quantitatively it is decidedly murky: several key outstanding problems remain which challenge our basic understanding of binary-star physics. Barium stars with orbital periods less than about 4,000 days should -- according to theory -- be in circular orbits because of tidal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · History and Developments in Astronomy
