Published September 2025 | Version Published
Journal Article Open

Carbon Burning Cannot Explain Puffy Hypervelocity White Dwarfs

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon University of California, Santa Barbara
  • 3. ROR icon University of California, Berkeley

Abstract

Several hypervelocity white dwarfs (HVWDs) with space velocities of ≳1000 km s−1 have recently been discovered. One possible origin of these stars is the dynamically driven double-degenerate double-detonation (D6) scenario, in which an accreting sub-Chandrasekhar mass carbon-oxygen (CO) WD detonates as a SN Ia. In this scenario, the less massive WD may survive its companion’s detonation and be ejected as a HVWD. Most of the observed HVWDs are hotter and puffier than normal WDs, perhaps due to their recent proximity to a SN. In this work, we test whether these properties can be explained by long-lived stable carbon (C) burning in the interiors of CO WD donors triggered by a SN shock. We model the long-term evolution of CO WDs following rapid energy injection using 1D models. We find that stable C burning can be ignited in CO WDs with masses of 0.95–1.10 M if SN energy penetrates sufficiently deeply. The resulting born-again stars settle on the C-burning main sequence while they convert their interiors from C and O to Ne and Mg, where they have temperatures and radii similar to some of the observed HVWDs. However, the timescale over which C-burning WDs remain inflated is ≲105 yr, which is at least an order of magnitude shorter than the kinematic ages of observed hot HVWDs. We conclude that observed HVWDs are unlikely to be inflated by C burning. The stellar evolution of observed HVWDs remains an open problem.

Copyright and License

© 2025. The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd on behalf of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP). 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 the anonymous referee for helpful comments that improved the manuscript.

This research benefited from discussions that were funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through grant GBMF5076.

This research was supported by NSF grants AST-2508988 and AST-2307232 and by HST-GO-17441.001-A. N.Y. acknowledges support from the Ezoe Memorial Recruit Foundation scholarship. T.L.S.W. acknowledges support from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through grant GBMF5076. K.J.S. is supported by NASA through the Astrophysics Theory Program (80NSSC20K0544) and by NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope program No. 17441.

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Additional details

Related works

Is new version of
Discussion Paper: arXiv:2507.15952 (arXiv)

Funding

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
GBMF5076
National Science Foundation
AST-2508988
National Science Foundation
AST-2307232
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
HST-GO-17441.001-A
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
80NSSC20K0544
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
17441

Dates

Accepted
2025-09-08
Available
2025-09-25
Published online

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Astronomy Department, Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy (PMA)
Publication Status
Published