Constraints on White Dwarf Hydrogen Layer Masses Using Gravitational Redshifts
Stefan M. Arseneau, J. J. Hermes, Maria E. Camisassa, Roberto Raddi, Evan B. Bauer
arXiv:2603.02314v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: The hydrogen envelope is the outermost layer of a DA white dwarf; it makes up the entirety of the stellar photosphere, and yet its typical extent is difficult to model theoretically and remains poorly observationally constrained. As a result, hydrogen envelope mass is a substantial source of systematic uncertainty in physical properties of white dwarf, including overall masses and cooling ages. In this work, we fit a Gaussian mixture model to gravitational redshifts from high-resolution spectroscopy, paired with radius measurements from Gaia BP/RP spectra, to measure the mass-radius relation for a sample of 468 white dwarfs. Our results are in excellent agreement with the predicted mass-radius relations of state-of-the-art evolutionary models, including those from the MESA Isochrones and Stellar Tracks (MIST) library. We find that mass-radius relations such as MIST which assume a thick and mass-dependent hydrogen envelope are preferred by the observed probability density function over models which assume a constant hydrogen envelope mass. Proper treatment of the evolution of white dwarf progenitors is thus important for accurately modeling the mass-radius relation. Our results indicate that gravitational redshift measurements of large samples of white dwarfs in wide binaries are promising probes of the hydrogen envelope masses of DA white dwarfs.arXiv:2603.02314v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: The hydrogen envelope is the outermost layer of a DA white dwarf; it makes up the entirety of the stellar photosphere, and yet its typical extent is difficult to model theoretically and remains poorly observationally constrained. As a result, hydrogen envelope mass is a substantial source of systematic uncertainty in physical properties of white dwarf, including overall masses and cooling ages. In this work, we fit a Gaussian mixture model to gravitational redshifts from high-resolution spectroscopy, paired with radius measurements from Gaia BP/RP spectra, to measure the mass-radius relation for a sample of 468 white dwarfs. Our results are in excellent agreement with the predicted mass-radius relations of state-of-the-art evolutionary models, including those from the MESA Isochrones and Stellar Tracks (MIST) library. We find that mass-radius relations such as MIST which assume a thick and mass-dependent hydrogen envelope are preferred by the observed probability density function over models which assume a constant hydrogen envelope mass. Proper treatment of the evolution of white dwarf progenitors is thus important for accurately modeling the mass-radius relation. Our results indicate that gravitational redshift measurements of large samples of white dwarfs in wide binaries are promising probes of the hydrogen envelope masses of DA white dwarfs.
2026-03-04