Characterizing the galactic white dwarf binary population with sparsely sampled radial velocity data

Dan Maoz*, Carles Badenes, Steven J. Bickerton

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

39 Scopus citations

Abstract

We present a method to characterize statistically the parameters of a detached binary sample - binary fraction, separation distribution, and mass-ratio distribution - using noisy radial velocity data with as few as two, randomly spaced, epochs per object. To do this, we analyze the distribution of ΔRVmax, the maximum radial velocity difference between any two epochs for the same object. At low values, the core of this distribution is dominated by measurement errors, but for large enough samples there is a high-velocity tail that can effectively constrain the parameters of the binary population. We discuss our approach for the case of a population of detached white dwarf (WD) binaries with separations that are decaying via gravitational wave emission. We derive analytic expressions for the present-day distribution of separations, integrated over the star formation history of the Galaxy, for parameterized initial WD separation distributions at the end of the common-envelope phase. We use Monte Carlo techniques to produce grids of simulated ΔRVmax distributions with specific binary population parameters, and the same sampling cadences and radial velocity errors as the observations, and we compare them to the real ΔRVmax distribution to constrain the properties of the binary population. We illustrate the sensitivity of the method to both the model and observational parameters. In the particular case of binary WDs, every model population predicts a merger rate per star which can easily be compared to specific TypeIa supernova rates. In a companion paper, we apply the method to a sample of 4000 WDs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The binary fractions and separation distribution parameters allowed by the data indicate a rate of WD-WD mergers per unit stellar mass in the Galactic disk, 1 × 10-13 mergers yr-1 M -1 ⊙, remarkably similar to the rate per unit mass of TypeIa supernovae in Milky Way like galaxies.

Original languageEnglish
Article number143
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume751
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jun 2012

Keywords

  • binaries: close
  • binaries: spectroscopic
  • supernovae: general
  • white dwarfs

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