# Infrared observations of white dwarfs and the implications for the   accretion of dusty planetary material

**Authors:** Amy Bonsor, Jay Farihi, Mark C. Wyatt, Rik van Lieshout

arXiv: 1702.05123 · 2017-04-12

## TL;DR

This study analyzes infrared data of white dwarfs to understand dust disc properties and their relation to metal pollution, revealing that most polluted white dwarfs lack detectable wide, opaque dust discs, suggesting alternative accretion mechanisms.

## Contribution

The paper provides the first unbiased analysis of infrared excesses in white dwarfs, proposing four scenarios explaining the absence of detectable dust discs despite pollution.

## Key findings

- No more than 3.3% of white dwarfs have wide, opaque dust discs.
- Most polluted white dwarfs lack detectable infrared excesses.
- Multiple scenarios explain the absence of infrared excess in polluted white dwarfs.

## Abstract

Infrared excesses around metal polluted white dwarfs have been associated with the accretion of dusty, planetary material. This work analyses the available infrared data for an unbiased sample of white dwarfs and demonstrates that no more than 3.3% can have a wide, flat, opaque dust disc, extending to the Roche radius, with a temperature at the disc inner edge of $T_{in} = 1,400$K, the standard model for the observed excesses. This is in stark contrast to the incidence of pollution of about 30%. We present four potential reasons for the absence of an infrared excess in polluted white dwarfs, depending on their stellar properties and inferred accretion rates: i) their dust discs are opaque, but narrow, thus evading detection if more than 85% of polluted white dwarfs have dust discs narrower than $\delta r< 0.04r$, ii) their dust discs have been fully consumed, which only works for the oldest white dwarfs with sinking timescales longer than hundreds of years, iii) their dust is optically thin, which can supply low accretion rates of $<10^7 $gs$^{-1}$ if dominated by PR-drag, and higher accretion rates, if inwards transport of material is enhanced, for example due to the presence of gas, iv) their accretion is supplied by a pure gas disc, which could result from the sublimation of optically thin dust for T* > 20, 000K. Future observations sensitive to faint infrared excesses or the presence of gas, can test the scenarios presented here, thereby better constraining the nature of the material fuelling accretion in polluted white dwarfs.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.05123/full.md

## Figures

18 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.05123/full.md

## References

60 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.05123/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1702.05123