Horizontal spreading of planetary debris accreted by white dwarfs
Tim Cunningham, Pier-Emmanuel Tremblay, Evan B. Bauer, Odette Toloza,, Elena Cukanovaite, Detlev Koester, Jay Farihi, Bernd Freytag, Boris T., G\"ansicke, Hans-G\"unter Ludwig, Dimitri Veras

TL;DR
This study uses 3D simulations to analyze how metals from planetary debris spread across white dwarf surfaces, revealing temperature-dependent diffusion behaviors that impact interpretations of accretion and surface composition.
Contribution
First to provide horizontal diffusion coefficients in white dwarf atmospheres through 3D radiation-hydrodynamics simulations, coupling them with vertical coefficients for comprehensive surface spreading analysis.
Findings
Warm hydrogen atmospheres do not efficiently spread metals.
Cooler atmospheres predict homogeneous metal distribution.
Results challenge current assumptions about surface abundance variations.
Abstract
White dwarfs with metal-polluted atmospheres have been studied widely in the context of the accretion of rocky debris from evolved planetary systems. One open question is the geometry of accretion and how material arrives and mixes in the white dwarf surface layers. Using the 3D radiation-hydrodynamics code COBOLD, we present the first transport coefficients in degenerate star atmospheres which describe the advection-diffusion of a passive scalar across the surface-plane. We couple newly derived horizontal diffusion coefficients with previously published vertical diffusion coefficients to provide theoretical constraints on surface spreading of metals in white dwarfs. Our grid of 3D simulations probes the vast majority of the parameter space of convective white dwarfs, with pure-hydrogen atmospheres in the effective temperature range 6000-18000 K and pure-helium atmospheres in the…
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.
