A born ultramassive white dwarf-hot subdwarf super-Chandrasekhar candidate
Changqing Luo, Jiao Li, Chuanjie Zheng, Dongdong Liu, Zhenwei Li,, Yangping Luo, Peter Nemeth, Bo Zhang, Jianping Xiong, Bo Wang, Song Wang, Yu, Bai, Qingzheng Li, Pei Wang, Zhanwen Han, Jifeng Liu, Yang Huang, Xuefei, Chen, Chao Liu

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a binary system with a super-Chandrasekhar mass white dwarf, providing observational evidence for potential accretion-induced collapse events and challenging existing models of stellar endpoints.
Contribution
It presents the first observational candidate of a born ultramassive white dwarf exceeding the Chandrasekhar limit, supporting the AIC pathway to neutron star formation.
Findings
Binary system with total mass 1.67-1.92 solar masses
White dwarf likely formed through common envelope ejections
System expected to merge and trigger AIC in 500-540 million years
Abstract
Although supernovae is a well-known endpoint of an accreting white dwarf, alternative theoretical possibilities has been discussing broadly, such as the accretion-induced collapse (AIC) event as the endpoint of oxygen-neon (ONe) white dwarfs, either accreting up to or merging to excess the Chandrasekhar limit (the maximum mass of a stable white dwarf). AIC is an important channel to form neutron stars, especially for those unusual systems, which are hardly produced by core-collapse supernovae. However, the observational evidences for this theoretical predicted event and its progenitor are all very limited. In all of the known progenitors, white dwarfs increase in mass by accretion. Here, we report the discovery of an intriguing binary system Lan 11, consisted of a stripped core-helium-burning hot subdwarf and an unseen compact object of 1.08 to 1.35 . Our binary population…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
