A half-ring of ionized circumstellar material trapped in the magnetosphere of a white dwarf merger remnant
Andrei A. Cristea, Ilaria Caiazzo, Tim Cunningham, John C. Raymond, Stephane Vennes, Adela Kawka, Aayush Desai, David R. Miller, J. J. Hermes, Jim Fuller, Jeremy Heyl, Jan van Roestel, Kevin B. Burdge, Antonio C. Rodriguez, Ingrid Pelisoli, Boris T. G\"ansicke, Paula Szkody

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a highly magnetized, rapidly rotating white dwarf merger remnant with circumstellar ionized gas, exhibiting unique variability and signs of spin-down, likely due to magnetic interactions with surrounding material.
Contribution
It presents the first evidence of a half-ring of ionized circumstellar material trapped in the magnetosphere of a white dwarf merger remnant, revealing new insights into post-merger evolution.
Findings
Detection of a rapidly rotating, highly magnetized white dwarf.
Observation of a half-ring of ionized circumstellar gas.
Measurement of the white dwarf's spin-down rate.
Abstract
Many white dwarfs are observed in compact double white dwarf binaries and, through the emission of gravitational waves, a large fraction are destined to merge. The merger remnants that do not explode in a Type Ia supernova are expected to initially be rapidly rotating and highly magnetized. We here present our discovery of the variable white dwarf ZTF J200832.79+444939.67, hereafter ZTF J2008+4449, as a likely merger remnant showing signs of circumstellar material without a stellar or substellar companion. The nature of ZTF J2008+4449 as a merger remnant is supported by its physical properties: hot ( K) and massive ( M), the white dwarf is rapidly rotating with a period of 6.6 minutes and likely possesses exceptionally strong magnetic fields ( 400-600 MG) at its surface. Remarkably, we detect a significant period derivative of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
