The white dwarf cooling sequence of NGC 6791: a unique tool for stellar evolution
E. Garc\'ia-Berro, S. Torres, I. Renedo, J. Camacho, L. G. Althaus, A., H. C\'orsico, M. Salaris, J. Isern

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations of white dwarf cooling sequences in NGC 6791 to constrain stellar population characteristics, revealing insights into binary fractions, core compositions, and chemical diversity.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive Monte Carlo simulation approach with updated cooling models to analyze the white dwarf population in NGC 6791, providing new constraints on stellar evolution and cluster properties.
Findings
Less than 5% of white dwarfs are helium-core.
The binary secondary mass distribution favors higher mass ratios.
The non-DA white dwarf fraction is below 6%.
Abstract
NGC 6791 is a well-studied, metal-rich open cluster that is so close to us that can be imaged down to luminosities fainter than that of the termination of its white dwarf cooling sequence, thus allowing for an in-depth study of its white dwarf population. We use a Monte Carlo simulator that employs up-to-date evolutionary cooling sequences for white dwarfs with hydrogen-rich and hydrogen-deficient atmospheres, with carbon-oxygen and helium cores. The cooling sequences for carbon-oxygen cores account for the delays introduced by both Ne^22 sedimentation in the liquid phase and by carbon-oxygen phase separation upon crystallization. We do not find evidence for a substantial fraction of helium-core white dwarfs, and hence our results support the suggestion that the origin of the bright peak of the white dwarf luminosity function can only be attributed to a population of unresolved binary…
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.
