On the Spectral Evolution of Helium-Atmosphere White Dwarfs Showing Traces of Hydrogen
Benoit Rolland, Pierre Bergeron, Gilles Fontaine

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spectral evolution of helium-atmosphere white dwarfs with traces of hydrogen, revealing that many are stratified and challenging previous accretion or convective dilution models.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectroscopic analysis and models of hydrogen content in helium-atmosphere white dwarfs, proposing new insights into their spectral evolution and origin.
Findings
63% of helium-atmosphere white dwarfs show hydrogen lines.
Pure DB white dwarfs can persist at low temperatures without hydrogen.
Inferred hydrogen masses in DBA stars are incompatible with convective dilution models.
Abstract
We present a detailed spectroscopic analysis of 115 helium-line (DB) and 28 cool, He-rich hydrogen-line (DA) white dwarfs based on atmosphere fits to optical spectroscopy and photometry. We find that 63% of our DB population show hydrogen lines, making them DBA stars. We also demonstrate the persistence of pure DB white dwarfs with no detectable hydrogen feature at low effective temperatures. Using state-of-the art envelope models, we next compute the total quantity of hydrogen, , that is contained in the outer convection zone as a function of effective temperature and atmospheric H/He ratio. We find that some pairs cannot physically exist as a homogeneously mixed structure; such combination can only occur as stratified objects of the DA spectral type. On that basis, we show that the values of inferred for the bulk of the DBA stars…
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