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Published November 1, 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

Tidal Spin-up of Subdwarf B Stars

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon Princeton University

Abstract

Hot subdwarf B (sdB) stars are stripped helium-burning stars that are often found in close binaries, where they experience strong tidal interactions. The dissipation of tidally excited gravity waves alters their rotational evolution throughout the sdB lifetime. While many sdB binaries have well-measured rotational and orbital frequencies, there have been few theoretical efforts to accurately calculate the tidal torque produced by gravity waves. In this work, we directly calculate the tidal excitation of internal gravity waves in realistic sdB stellar models and integrate the coupled spin–orbit evolution of sdB binaries. We find that for canonical sdB (M sdB = 0.47 M ⊙) binaries, the transitional orbital period below which they could reach tidal synchronization in the sdB lifetime is ∼0.2 day, with weak dependence on the companion masses. For low-mass sdBs (M sdB = 0.37 M ⊙) formed from more massive progenitor stars, the transitional orbital period becomes ∼0.15 day. These values are very similar to the tidal synchronization boundary (∼0.2 day) evident from observations. We discuss the dependence of tidal torques on stellar radii, and we make predictions for the rapidly rotating white dwarfs formed from synchronized sdB binaries.

Copyright and License

© 2024. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.

Acknowledgement

We thank Holly Preece and the anonymous referee for constructive comments on the manuscript. We thank Evan Bauer, Ylva Götberg, Rich Townsend, Emily Hu, Peter Scherbak, Reed Essick, and Yuri Levin for helpful discussions. This work is partially supported by NASA through grant 20-XRP20 2-0147. L.M. is thankful for the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics and the Kavli Foundation, who supported the 2023 Kavli Summer Program where many of the above discussions took place.

Software References

Software: MESA (B. Paxton et al. 20112013201520182019), GYRE (R. H. D. Townsend & S. A. Teitler 2013; R. H. D. Townsend et al. 2018; J. Goldstein & R. H. D. Townsend 2020), SciPy (P. Virtanen et al. 2020), matplotlib (J. D. Hunter 2007), numpy (C. R. Harris et al. 2020).

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Additional details

Created:
October 31, 2024
Modified:
November 8, 2024