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Title: X-ray Grating Spectroscopy


1
X-ray Photospheres
  • Klaus Werner
  • Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics,
    University of Tübingen, Germany

2
Outline
  • Introduction Thermal soft X-ray emission from
    stellar photospheres
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the hot DA white dwarf
    LB1919 Implications for vertical chemical
    stratification in WDs
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the PG1159 star
    PG1520525 Constraining the GW Vir instability
    strip in the HRD
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the naked C/O stellar
    core H150465 The hottest known and chemically
    most extreme white dwarf

3
Introduction
  • Only evolved compact stars are hot enough to be
    able to emit thermal (soft) X-radiation from
    their photosphere
  • Neutron stars (not covered in this talk)
  • (Pre-) white dwarfs (WDs), (some are central
    stars of PNe)
  • WDs come in two flavors
  • Hydrogen-rich (DA WDs)
  • Helium and/or C-O-rich (non-DAs),
  • relevant here PG1159 stars, the hottest non-DA
    WDs

4
Introduction
  • Hydrogen-rich WDs
  • Photospheres of hot DAs are almost completely
    ionized, hence, very low opacity. Observed X-rays
    stem from very deep, hot layers.
  • Soft X-rays are detected from objects with Teff
    gt30,000 K
  • Famous example Sirius B
  • He-C-O-rich (non-DA) WDs
  • Opacities of He and metals prevent leakage of
    X-rays from deep hot layers, except for hottest
    objects, where these species are highly ionised
    and more transparent
  • Soft X-rays are detected from objects with Teff
    gt140,000 K
  • Famous example H150465

5
Outline
  • Introduction Thermal soft X-ray emission from
    stellar photospheres
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the hot DA white dwarf
    LB1919 Implications for vertical chemical
    stratification in WDs
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the PG1159 star
    PG1520525 Constraining the GW Vir instability
    strip in the HRD
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the naked C/O stellar
    core H150465 The hottest known and chemically
    most extreme white dwarf

6
Metals as sensitive regulators of X-rays from DA
white dwarfs
  • Hydrogen in hot DAs almost completely ionized,
    EUV/soft X-ray opacity strongly reduced ? DAs
    with Teff gt30,000 K can emit thermal soft X-rays
    from deep hot layers
  • However, ROSAT All-Sky Survey revealed that X-ray
    emission is the exception rather than the rule ?
    additional absorbers present
  • ROSAT and EUVE revealed that metals are the
    origin, EUV spectra are strongly determined by Fe
    and Ni through large number of absorption lines
  • Radiative levitation keeps traces of metals in
    the atmosphere (e.g. Chayer et al. 1995)
    Generally, metal abundances increase with
    increasing Teff.
  • Consequently, only very few DAs with Teffgt60,000
    K were detected in EUVE and ROSAT All-Sky Surveys.

7
  • Breakthrough in understanding DA atmospheres
    development of self-consistent models for
    equilibrium of gravitational settling / radiative
    levitation, yield vertical abundance
    stratification
  • Generally, good agreement between observed and
    computed EUV flux distributions (e.g. Schuh et
    al. 2002)
  • However, several exceptions are known. Some DAs
    show much larger metal abundances than expected
    from theory, reason ISM accretion or
    wind-accretion from unseen companion
  • More difficult to explain objects with
    metallicity smaller than expected

8
The problem of metal-poor DA white dwarfs
  • Prominent example HZ43 (Teff 49,000 K),
    virtually metal free, shows no EUV or X-ray
    absorption features
  • Even more surprising low metallicity of two DAs
    with even higher Teff. Two of hottest known DAs
    have extraordinarily low metal abundances LB1919
    (69,000 K) MCT0027-6341 (60,000 K)
  • These stars could hold the key to understanding
    metal-poor DAs as a class
  • We concentrate on LB1919, it is brighter in
    EUV/X-rays
  • LB1919 hottest of the 90 DAs detected in EUVE
    all-sky survey (Vennes et al. 1997). Hottest of
    the 20 DAs whose EUVE spectra were analyzed in
    detail by Wolff et al. (1998)
  • Chemical composition unknown EUVE resolution
    insufficient to resolve individual lines
    metallicity of fainter DAs usually determined
    relative to G191-B2B (56,000 K) that is well
    studied by UV spectroscopy.

9
The problem of metal-poor DA white dwarfs
  • Our stratified models successfully describe the
    EUV spectrum of G191-B2B. EUVE spectra of other
    DAs could also be fitted by simply scaling G191s
    relative metal abundance pattern.
  • But the EUV spectrum of LB1919 cannot be
    described by chemically homogeneous models scaled
    to G191 relative abundances. Also, radiatively
    stratified models fail spectacularly.

10
The problem of metal-poor DA white dwarfs
  • Four processes can disturb equilibrium between
    gravitation and levitation potentially
    responsible for metal-poor hot DAs
  • Mass-loss tends to homogenize chemical
    stratification. However, M-dot drops below
    critical limit (10-16 M?/yr) for Tefflt70,000 K
    (Unglaub Bues 1998). So, LB1919 should not be
    affected.
  • Wind-accretion calculations (MacDonald 1992) show
    that ISM accretion is prevented for LB1919 since
    its Lgt1L?. Instead, mass-loss rate of 10-18 M?/yr
    will be sustained
  • Convection not expected in LB1919
  • Rotation could lead to meridional mixing,
    however, WDs are generally slow rotators. In
    particular, LB1919 shows sharp Lyman line cores
    (FUSE), ruling out high rotation rate.
  • Currently there is no explanation for the low
    metallicity in LB1919 and similar DAs

11
Chandra observation of LB1919
  • Aim Empirical determination of abundance
    stratification using individual lines of
    different ionization stages of Fe, Ni ...
  • IF metals are stratified, then they are in
    diffusion/levitation equilibrium. The low
    metallicity might originate in earlier
    evolutionary phases (selective radiation driven
    wind?)
  • IF metals are homogeneous, then one of the above
    mechanisms is at work, contrary to our
    understanding

12
  • Individual lines can in principle be identified
    in Chandra spectra, as was shown for the hot DA
    GD 246 (Vennes et al. 2002).

GD 246 - Chandra
13
Simulated Chandra observations of
LB1919LETGHRC-S, 120 ksec
  • Parameters of LB1919
  • Teff70,000 K logg8.2 Fe/H7.510-7
    Ni/H510-8
  • (EUVE analysis of Wolff et al. 1998 with
    homogeneous models)

Two models shown a) nickel enhanced by 1 dex
(black line) b) iron and nickel enhanced by 1 dex
(red line) Strong sensitivity of the spectrum
against abundance variations
14
Chandra observation of LB1919
  • Low Energy Transmission Grating (LETGHRC-S)
  • Integration time 111 ksec, Feb. 02, 2006

15
Chandra observation of LB1919
  • Low Energy Transmission Grating (LETGHRC-S)
  • Integration time 111 ksec, Feb. 02, 2006
  • Line features in model too strong, analysis
    is on-going, no results yet

16
Outline
  • Introduction Thermal soft X-ray emission from
    stellar photospheres
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the hot DA white dwarf
    LB1919 Implications for vertical chemical
    stratification in WDs
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the PG1159 star
    PG1520525 Constraining the GW Vir instability
    strip in the HRD
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the naked C/O stellar
    core H150465 The hottest known and chemically
    most extreme white dwarf

17
  • The PG1159 spectroscopic class, a group of 40
    stars
  • Very hot hydrogen-deficient (pre-) WDs
  • Teff 75,000 200,000 K
  • log g 5.5 8
  • M/M? 0.51 0.89 (mean 0.62)
  • log L/L? 1.1 4.2
  • Atmospheres dominated by C, He, O, and Ne, e.g.
    prototype PG1159-035
  • He33, C48, O17, Ne2 (mass fractions)
  • chemistry of material between H and He burning
    shells in AGB-stars (intershell abundances)

18
late He-shell flash causes return to AGB
Evolutionary tracks for a 2 M? star. Born-again
track offset for clarity. (Werner Herwig 2006)
19
  • Loss of H-rich envelope consequence of (very)
    late thermal pulse during post-AGB phase (LTP) or
    WD cooling phase (VLTP) (like Sakurais object
    and FG Sge)
  • Hydrogen envelope (thickness 10-4 M?) is ingested
    and burned (VLTP) or diluted (LTP) in He-rich
    intershell (thickness 10-2 M?)
  • In any case, composition of He/C/O-rich
    intershell region dominates complete envelope on
    top of stellar C/O core

20
Late He-shell flash
10-4 M?
10-2 M?
CO core material (dredged up)
21
Pulsating (filled circles) and non-pulsating
PG1159 stars
PG1159-035
PG1520525
0.6 M? track (Wood Faulkner 1986)
Blue (Gautschy et al. 2005) and red (Quirion et
al. 2004) edges of GW Vir instability strip
22
The pulsator/non-pulsator pair PG 1159-035 and
PG 1520525
  • Very similar atmospheric parameters

PG1159-035 PG1520525
Teff 140,000 150,000
log g 7.0 7.5
He 0.33 0.43
C 0.48 0.38
O 0.17 0.17
Ne 0.02 0.02
Mass/M? 0.60 0.67
23
The pulsator/non-pulsator pair PG 1159-035 and
PG 1520525
  • Do both stars confine the blue edge of the
    instability strip?
  • To what accuracy is their Teff known?
  • PG1159-035 140,000 /- 5,000 K
  • from HST/STIS high-resolution UV spectrum, Jahn
    et al. (2007)
  • PG1520525 150,000 /- 15,000 K
  • from HST/GHRS medium-resolution UV spectrum,
    Dreizler Heber (1998)
  • Need a more precise Teff estimate for PG1520525
  • Try soft X-ray region PG1520525 is the soft
    X-ray brightest PG1159 star after H150465.
  • First attempt with EUVE suggested Teff around
    150,000 K, however, poor-S/N spectrum

24
Werner et al. (1996)
25
Soft X-ray spectral modeling of PG 1520525
  • Grid of non-LTE models (hydrostatic, radiative
    equilibrium)
  • Ions included He I-III, C III-V, O IV-VII, Ne
    IV-IX, Mg IV-IX
  • Particular model shown here tailored to
    PG1520525
  • For comparison with Chandra observation model
    flux used to simulate Chandra count rate spectrum
    including expected S/N

26
Chandra observation of PG 1520525
  • Low Energy Transmission Grating (LETGHRC-S)
  • Integration time 142 ksec, April 04-06, 2006

27
Chandra observation of PG 1520525
  • Low Energy Transmission Grating (LETGHRC-S)
  • Integration time 142 ksec, April 04-06, 2006

28
Detail of PG 1520525 Chandra spectrum, 100-123 Ã…
model observation
29
Detail of PG 1520525 Chandra spectrum, 100-123 Ã…
NeVII OVI
OVI
NeVI
model observation
NeVII NeVI
Identification of OVI and NeVI / VII lines
30
FUV studies of PG1520525
  • Element abundances affect soft X-ray flux, but
    due to difficult line identification there,
    constraints must be provided from other
    observations
  • Crucial FUSE spectroscopy. All identified
    species in PG1520525 display lines in this
    wavelength region. Besides presence of He, C, O
  • First identification of silicon, sulfur,
    phosphorus
  • abundance determinations by Reiff et al. (2007)
  • First identification of neon and fluorine
  • strongly over-solar abundances (Werner et al.
    2004, 2005)

31
First discovery of fluorine in hot post-AGB
stars F VI 1139.50 Ã… F abundance in
PG1520525 200 times solar PG1159-035 10
times solar
32
140,000 K model too cool, good fit with 150,000 K
model.
33
Pulsating (filled circles) and non-pulsating
PG1159 stars
PG1159-035
PG1520525
0.6 M? track (Wood Faulkner 1986)
PG1159-035 and PG1520525 indeed confine the
blue edge of the GW Vir instability strip
34
Outline
  • Introduction Thermal soft X-ray emission from
    stellar photospheres
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the hot DA white dwarf
    LB1919 Implications for vertical chemical
    stratification in WDs
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the PG1159 star
    PG1520525 Constraining the GW Vir instability
    strip in the HRD
  • Chandra spectroscopy of the naked C/O stellar
    core H150465 The hottest known and chemically
    most extreme white dwarf

35
Properties of H150465
  • 1983 H1504 is the 7th brightest X-ray source in
    the 0.25 keV band (HEAO1 survey, Nugent et
    al.)
  • 1986 Optical identification Extremely hot
    white dwarf, lacking H and He lines (Nousek et
    al.)
  • 1991 NLTE analysis of optical spectra (Werner)
  • It is the hottest WD known (Teff close to 200
    000 K)
  • H1504 is devoid of hydrogen and helium
  • Dominant photospheric species C and O (5050)
  • 1999 Analysis of EUVE Keck data (Werner
    Wolff)
  • High neon abundance 2-5 (gt20 times solar)
  • H1504 is an extreme member of the PG1159
    spectroscopic class

36
  • Chandra LETGHRC-S observation of H150465
  • Sept. 27, 2000, integration time 7 hours
  • Richest absorption line spectrum ever recorded
    from a stellar photosphere
  • (Werner et al. 2004, AA 421, 1169)
  • Examples for spectral fitting

37
Model fit to H150465 Chandra spectrum 80-110 Ã…
Relative flux
Wavelength / Ã…
38
Model fit to H150465 Chandra spectrum 80-110 Ã…
Relative flux
Wavelength / Ã…
39
Model fit to H150465 Chandra spectrum 80-110 Ã…
Relative flux
Wavelength / Ã…
40
Model fit to H150465 Chandra spectrum 110-140 Ã…
Relative flux
Wavelength / Ã…
41
Model fit to H150465 Chandra spectrum 110-140 Ã…
Relative flux
Wavelength / Ã…
42
Model fit to H150465 Chandra spectrum 110-140 Ã…
Relative flux
Wavelength / Ã…
43
Strong Fe-group line blanketing
44
Strong Fe-group line blanketing
45
Strong Fe-group line blanketing
46
  • Origin of unique C/O/Ne surface composition of
    H1504 remains unknown. Obviously, H1504 is a bare
    C/O core of a former AGB giant.
  • Detection of Mg?2 in Chandra spectrum even
    suggests
  • H1504 could be a bare O/Ne/Mg white dwarf, i.e.
    first observational proof for existence of such
    objects
  • Approved HST UV-spectroscopy (2005) Search for
    Na, but
  • failure of STIS just before observations should
    be done

47
Summary
  • Hottest WDs have detectable photospheric soft
    X-ray emission
  • X-ray grating spectroscopy important (and often
    essential) to derive stellar parameters and
    details of photospheric processes
  • Results are relevant for our understanding of
    late phases of stellar evolution
  • In detail Chandra spectroscopy of a hot DA white
    dwarf and of two PG1159 stars
  • Analysis of LB1919 will provide clues to answer
    the question why some hot DAs show a lower
    metallicity than expected from radiative
    levitation theory
  • PG1520525 confines the blue edge of the GW Vir
    instability strip (Teff140,000150,000 at
    logg7)
  • H150465 could turn out to be the first
    definitive proof for the existence of (single)
    O/Ne/Mg white dwarfs
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