Stars on the ascending helium giant branch I. From white dwarf merger to helium giant: the evolutionary state of the rapidly rotating hot subdwarf HE 1518-0948
M. Pritzkuleit, M. Dorsch, M. M. Miller Bertolami, S. Geier, C. W. Bradshaw, H. Dawson

TL;DR
This paper studies the evolutionary state of the hot subdwarf HE 1518-0948, revealing it as a product of a double helium white dwarf merger currently ascending the helium giant branch, providing insights into massive hot subdwarf evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed spectroscopic analysis of HE 1518-0948, confirming its origin from a double helium white dwarf merger and its current evolutionary phase.
Findings
HE 1518-0948 is a merger product of two helium white dwarfs.
It is currently undergoing helium shell burning on the helium giant branch.
The star is located in a sparsely populated region of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.
Abstract
Hot subdwarf stars with masses above ascend the helium giant branch after the end of core helium burning, before entering the white dwarf cooling track or exploding as type Ib/c supernovae. Such massive helium stars are typically expected to form through the stripping of an intermediate mass star by a binary companion after which some hydrogen is still expected to be retained. However, the subclass of extreme helium rich hot subdwarfs (He-sdOs) shows no or very weak hydrogen traces, and their low binary fraction suggests that they are either created through single-star evolution triggered by a late hot flash in a low-mass red giant or the merger of two helium white dwarfs. Most He-sdOs are located close to the helium zero-age main sequence, while a small number exhibit much lower surface gravities, indicating inflated radii. Whether these objects are evolutionarily…
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.
