Login / Signup

A highly magnetized and rapidly rotating white dwarf as small as the Moon.

Ilaria CaiazzoKevin B BurdgeJames FullerJeremy HeylS R KulkarniThomas A PrinceHarvey B RicherJosiah SchwabIgor AndreoniEric C BellmAndrew DrakeDmitry A DuevMatthew J GrahamGeorge HelouAshish A MahabalFrank J MasciRoger SmithMaayane T Soumagnac
Published in: Nature (2021)
White dwarfs represent the last stage of evolution of stars with mass less than about eight times that of the Sun and, like other stars, are often found in binaries1,2. If the orbital period of the binary is short enough, energy losses from gravitational-wave radiation can shrink the orbit until the two white dwarfs come into contact and merge3. Depending on the component masses, the merger can lead to a supernova of type Ia or result in a massive white dwarf4. In the latter case, the white dwarf remnant is expected to be highly magnetized5,6 because of the strong magnetic dynamo that should arise during the merger, and be rapidly spinning from the conservation of the orbital angular momentum7. Here we report observations of a white dwarf, ZTF J190132.9+145808.7, that exhibits these properties, but to an extreme: a rotation period of 6.94 minutes, a magnetic field ranging between 600 megagauss and 900 megagauss over its surface, and a stellar radius of [Formula: see text] kilometres, only slightly larger than the radius of the Moon. Such a small radius implies that the star's mass is close to the maximum white dwarf mass, or Chandrasekhar mass. ZTF J190132.9+145808.7 is likely to be cooling through the Urca processes (neutrino emission from electron capture on sodium) because of the high densities reached in its core.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • radiation therapy
  • high resolution
  • preterm infants
  • smoking cessation
  • liquid chromatography