Image of the Week

 

Gaia discovers interesting duo belonging to the Milky Way halo: an ultracool subdwarf with a white dwarf companion

 

Figure 1. VVV 1256−62AB’s average orbit from the past 2 Gyr (cyan curves) to the future 2 Gyr (red curves). Its current location is near the Sun and indicated by a white circle. The background image is the spiral structure of the Milky Way based on Gaia DR3 (Credits: ESA/Gaia/DPAC, Stefan Payne-Wardenaar, CC BY-SA 4.0 IGO). The edge-on orbit view in [Y, Z] space is plotted on the same scale and shown at the bottom. Credit: Roberto Raddi, Zenghua Zhang, MNRAS.

 

While studying stars located nearby and within 100 pc of the Sun, researchers found an interesting duo which belongs in the Milky Way halo: a combination of a white dwarf and an L subdwarf, forming a wide binary system. The first of its kind ever found that belongs to the halo. And it’s been there for a while, the system is thought to be about 10 Gyrs old.

The ultracool subdwarf (VVV1256-62B) of this interesting duo is a low-metallicity subdwarf. Low metallicities are an indication of age. At the early stage of the Universe, there were still very little “metals”, elements heavier than hydrogen and helium. If a star lacks these heavy elements, it is expected to be ancient, and therefore can give us hints on our Milky Way’s past. The subdwarf is right at the boundary between stellar and substellar objects, making it extra interesting to follow-up. It can be used as an age benchmark for studying metal-poor ultracool atmospheres.

The ultracool subdwarf forms a wide binary system with a white dwarf. White dwarfs have typically masses between ~0.17 and 1.33 solar masses, but while their mass is comparably to the Sun, their size is closer to the size of our Earth. A white dwarf is at the end of its evolutionary stage. While it is very hot when it forms and hence looks white, it will gradually cool off and redden because it no longer supports active fusion that keeps other stars going.

This white dwarf of the duo (VVV1256-62A) is low-mass, with a mass about half the mass of our Sun, and is located near the bottom right of the white dwarf cooling sequence, hence must be considerably old.

 

Figure 2. Artist’s conception of VVV1256-62AB. The background image is a section of Gaia’s view of the Milky Way (Credit: ESA/Gaia/DPAC, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO). The cool white dwarf VVV1256-62A (left) has a light orange colour. The ultracool subdwarf VVV1256-62B (right) is much cooler but also much larger than its white dwarf companion. The surface pattern of the ultracool subdwarf is based on 3D hydrodynamics simulations of ultracool dwarf atmospheres (Bernd Freytag). Note VVV1256-62B likely has a more transparent atmosphere than field ultracool dwarfs as it has fewer heavy elements. Credit: Jiaxin Zhong, Zenghua Zhang.

 

So how was this interesting duo found? A little bit by accident to be honest, while demonstrating Gaia data selection during a research training course for undergraduates at the Nanjing University. Prof. Zhang said: "I was giving an instruction to three undergraduates on how to find wide binaries with the Gaia Catalogue of Nearby Stars. As a show-how, on a whim, I decided to search for white dwarf + ultracool dwarf wide binaries with very tight criteria, and found 5 pairs. VVV1256-62B is a companion on the list, which surprised me, as I had written a paper on this object in 2019 and knew it was an L subdwarf with a very special Galactic orbit." While this specific treasure has now been found, there must be many more out there among the two billion stars Gaia has mapped so far.

Gaia’s Catalogue of Nearby Stars, published in December 2020 with Gaia’s Early Data Release 3, contains stars within 100 pc from our Sun and forms the basis for this quest to find primeval very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs. A sample of star combinations with almost identical proper motions (motions across the sky) and very similar distances was selected, and then down selected to contain only combinations of ultracool dwarfs with white dwarfs. For this additional selection the Gaia catalogue of non-single stars, published in June 2022, has been instrumental. From the initial 3199 common proper motion pairs, only five remained matching all these criteria.

 

Figure 3. VISTA one micron wavelength images (1x1 arcmin) of VVV1256-62 A (left) and B (right) taken in 2010 and 2015. Credits: VISTA, ESO

 

While all five of them are interesting pairs, the most interesting one is the set with the highest proper motions. Propagating the orbit shows that the duo belongs to the Milky Way halo. The system can be found close to our Sun at about 75 pc, and currently moves in the direction away from the Galactic centre with a speed of 406 km/s on a prograde, highly eccentric orbit. It can move out as wide as 31,000 pc from the Galactic centre, but comes close to the Galactic centre as well, to within 1,000 pc! Though it passes so close to the centre, the binary system has not been broken up yet, which is thanks to the extremely high velocity it has when it passes through this dense area of our Milky Way.

 

The orbital motion of VVV 1256−62AB (represented with a filled circle) from the past 2Gyr (cyan curves) to the future 2Gyr (red curves) in [X, Y] (upper panel) and [Y, Z] (lower panel) space. The location of the Sun is indicated with a five-pointed star. Credits: Roberto Raddi, Zenghua Zhang, MNRAS.

 

The Milky Way consists of many structures, groups of stars and peculiarly moving stars. We are learning more and more about the galactic halo and the systems that inhabit this area. Understanding the link between the halo and the Milky Way is important to understand the formation of our Milky Way and the history of the stars in the halo. By studying systems like these, and especially their orbits, we can learn more about the Milky Way as a whole. The origin of such an eccentric orbit has yet to be clarified but could be related to the existence of an in-situ inner halo or to a past merger of the Milky Way with a satellite galaxy.

On their own, both the white dwarf and the ultracool subdwarf are interesting objects. Together, in a wide binary system on its eccentric orbit, one plus one becomes three. The system can now also be used to test stellar evolution models and serves as a unique benchmark for testing both ultracool dwarf and white dwarf atmospheres.

VVV1256-62A was confirmed as DC white dwarf with an optical spectrum observed with the Gemini South telescope, one half of the International Gemini Observatory, supported in part by the U.S. National Science Foundation and operated by NSF NOIRLab. VVV1256-62B was confirmed as a sdL3 subdwarf with an optical to near infrared spectrum observed with the Very Large Telescope (VLT) of the European Southern Observatory (ESO). VVV1256-62AB were imaged by the Dark Energy Camera Plane Survey (DECaPS) of the Blanco telescope at NOIRLab’s Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory and the Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy’s (VISTA) Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) survey at ESO’s Paranel Observatory. These optical to near infrared photometric data were used to derive the age of the white dwarf.

This work was recently published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS) as the 8th paper of a series titled "Primeval very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs". The "Primeval" series focus on discoveries and characterization of ultracool subdwarfs, and is collected in the astrophysics data system (ADS) library.

 

Further reading:

 

 

Story written by T. Roegiers, Z. Zhang

 

Credits: ESA/Gaia/DPAC, Z. Zhang

[Published: 20/08/2024]

Image of the Week Archive

2024

20/08: Gaia discovers interesting duo belonging to the Milky Way halo: an ultracool subdwarf with a white dwarf companion

25/07: 10 years of Gaia science operations

23/07: How binary stars change their stellar dance with age

25/06: Dynamical masses across the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram

28/05: Did Gaia find its first neutron star?

26/04: A textbook solar eruption

22/04: Gaia's contribution to discovering distant worlds

16/04: Gaia spots Milky Way's most massive black hole of stellar origin

02/04: The Gaia Cataclysmic Variable hook

2023

19/12: 10 Science topics to celebrate Gaia's 10 years in space

31/10: Gaia observes cosmic clock inside a heavenly jewel

10/10: Gaia Focused Product Release stories

27/09: Does the Milky Way contain less dark matter than previously thought?

22/09: Mass-luminosity relation from Gaia's binary stars

13/09: Gaia DPAC CU8 seminars

13/06: Gaia's multi-dimensional Milky Way

18/05: Mapping the Milky Way

15/05: Goonhilly station steps in to save Gaia science data

25/04: The Gaia ESA Archive

05/04: Dual quasar found to be hosted by an ongoing galaxy merger at redshift 2.17

21/03: GaiaVari: a citizen science project to help Gaia variability classificaton

09/02: Missing mass in Albireo Ac: massive star or black hole?

31/01: Gaia reaches to the clouds – 3D kinematics of the LMC

25/01: Meet your neighbours: CNS5 - the fifth catalogue of nearby stars

18/01: A single-object visualisation tool for Gaia objects

2022

25/11: 100 months of Gaia data

23/11: The astonishment

09/11: Gamma-Ray Burst detection from Lagrange 2 point by Gaia

04/11: Gaia's first black hole discovery: Gaia BH1

26/10: Are Newton and Einstein in error after all?

21/10: Gaia ESA Archive goes live with third data release

06/10: Mapping the interstellar medium using the Gaia RVS spectra

26/09: Gaia on the hunt for dual quasars and gravitational lenses

23/09: Gaia's observation of relativistic deflection of light close to Jupiter

13/06: Gaia Data Release 3

10/06: MK classification of stars from BP/RP spectrophotometry across the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram

09/06: BP/RP low-resolution spectroscopy across the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram

27/05: Cepheids and their radial velocity curves

23/05: The Galaxy in your preferred colours

19/05: GaiaXPy 1.0.0 released, a tool for Gaia's BP/RP spectra users

11/05: Systemic proper motions of 73 galaxies in the Local group

28/03: Gaia query statistics

16/03: Gaia's first photo shooting of the James Webb Space Telescope

08/03: Gaia's women in science - coordination unit 8

25/02: Not only distances: what Gaia DR3 RR Lyrae stars will tell us about our Galaxy and beyond

11/02: Gaia's women in science

31/01: Astrometric orbit of the exoplanet-host star HD81040

12/01: The Local Bubble - source of our nearby stars

05/01: A Milky-Way relic of the formation of the Universe

2021

23/12: Signal-to-Noise ratio for Gaia DR3 BP/RP mean spectra

22/12: The 7 October 2021 stellar occultation by the Neptunian system

01/12: Observation of a long-predicted new type of binary star

24/09: Astrometric microlensing effect in the Gaia16aye event

22/09: the power of the third dimension - the discovery of a gigantic cavity in space

16/09: An alternative Gaia sky chart

25/08: Gaia Photometric Science Alerts and Gravitational Wave Triggers

09/07: How Gaia unveils what stars are made of

23/06: Interviews with CU3

27/04: HIP 70674 Orbital solution resulting from Gaia DR3 processing

30/03: First transiting exoplanet by Gaia

26/03: Apophis' Yarkovsky acceleration improved through stellar occultation

26/02: Matching observations to sources for Gaia DR4

2020

22/12: QSO emission lines in low-resolution BP/RP spectra

03/12: Gaia Early Data Release 3

29/10: Gaia EDR3 passbands

15/10: Star clusters are only the tip of the iceberg

04/09: Discovery of a year long superoutburst in a white dwarf binary

12/08: First calibrated XP spectra

22/07: Gaia and the size of the Solar System

16/07: Testing CDM and geometry-driven Milky Way rotation Curve Models

30/06: Gaia's impact on Solar system science

14/05: Machine-learning techniques reveal hundreds of open clusters in Gaia data

20/03: The chemical trace of Galactic stellar populations as seen by Gaia

09/01: Discovery of a new star cluster: Price-Whelan1

08/01: Largest ever seen gaseous structure in our Galaxy

2019

20/12: The lost stars of the Hyades

06/12: Do we see a dark-matter like effect in globular clusters?

12/11: Hypervelocity star ejected from a supermassive black hole

17/09: Instrument Development Award

08/08: 30th anniversary of Hipparcos

17/07: Whitehead Eclipse Avoidance Manoeuvre

28/06: Following up on Gaia Solar System Objects

19/06: News from the Gaia Archive

29/05: Spectroscopic variability of emission lines stars with Gaia

24/05: Evidence of new magnetic transitions in late-type stars

03/05: Atmospheric dynamics of AGB stars revealed by Gaia

25/04: Geographic contributions to DPAC

22/04: omega Centauri's lost stars

18/04: 53rd ESLAB symposium "the Gaia universe"

18/02: A river of stars

2018
21/12: Sonification of Gaia data
18/12: Gaia captures a rare FU Ori outburst
12/12: Changes in the DPAC Executive
26/11:New Very Low Mass dwarfs in Gaia data
19/11: Hypervelocity White Dwarfs in Gaia data
15/11: Hunting evolved carbon stars with Gaia RP spectra
13/11: Gaia catches the movement of the tiny galaxies surrounding the Milky Way
06/11: Secrets of the "wild duck" cluster revealed
12/10: 25 years since the initial GAIA proposal
09/10: 3rd Gaia DPAC Consortium Meeting
30/09: A new panoramic sky map of the Milky Way's Stellar Streams
25/09: Plausible home stars for interstellar object 'Oumuamua
11/09: Impressions from the IAU General Assembly
30/06: Asteroids in Gaia Data
14/06: Mapping and visualising Gaia DR2

25/04: In-depth stories on Gaia DR2

14/04: Gaia tops one trillion observations
16/03: Gaia DR2 Passbands
27/02: Triton observation campaign
11/02: Gaia Women In Science
29/01: Following-up on Gaia
2017
19/12: 4th launch anniversary
24/11: Gaia-GOSA service
27/10: German Gaia stamp in the making
19/10: Hertzsprung-russell diagram using Gaia DR1
05/10: Updated prediction to the Triton occultation campaign
04/10: 1:1 Gaia model arrives at ESAC
31/08: Close stellar encounters from the first Gaia data release
16/08: Preliminary view of the Gaia sky in colour
07/07: Chariklo stellar occultation follow-up
24/04: Gaia reveals the composition of asteroids
20/04: Extra-galactic observations with Gaia
10/04: How faint are the faintest Gaia stars?
24/03: Pulsating stars to study Galactic structures
09/02: Known exoplanetary transits in Gaia data
31/01: Successful second DPAC Consortium Meeting
2016
23/12: Interactive and statistical visualisation of Gaia DR1 with vaex
16/12: Standard uncertainties for the photometric data (in GDR1)
25/11: Signature of the rotation of the galactic bar uncovered
15/11: Successful first DR1 Workshop
27/10: Microlensing Follow-Up
21/10: Asteroid Occultation
16/09: First DR1 results
14/09: Pluto Stellar Occultation
15/06: Happy Birthday, DPAC!
10/06: 1000th run of the Initial Data Treatment system
04/05: Complementing Gaia observations of the densest sky regions
22/04: A window to Gaia - the focal plane
05/04: Hipparcos interactive data access tool
24/03: Gaia spots a sunspot
29/02: Gaia sees exploding stars next door
11/02: A new heart for the Gaia Object Generator
04/02: Searching for solar siblings with Gaia
28/01: Globular cluster colour-magnitude diagrams
21/01: Gaia resolving power estimated with Pluto and Charon
12/01: 100th First-Look Weekly Report
06/01: Gaia intersects a Perseid meteoroid
2015
18/12: Tales of two clusters retold by Gaia
11/11: Lunar transit temperature plots
06/11: Gaia's sensors scan a lunar transit
03/11: Celebrity comet spotted among Gaia's stars
09/10: The SB2 stars as seen by Gaia's RVS
02/10: The colour of Gaia's eyes
24/09: Estimating distances from parallaxes
18/09: Gaia orbit reconstruction
31/07: Asteroids all around
17/07: Gaia satellite and amateur astronomers spot one in a billion star
03/07: Counting stars with Gaia
01/07: Avionics Model test bench arrives at ESOC
28/05: Short period/faint magnitude Cepheids in the Large Magellanic Cloud
19/05: Visualising Gaia Photometric Science Alerts
09/04: Gaia honours Einstein by observing his cross
02/04: 1 April - First Look Scientists play practical joke
05/03: RR Lyrae stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud as seen by Gaia
26/02: First Gaia BP/RP deblended spectra
19/02: 13 months of GBOT Gaia observations
12/02: Added Value Interface Portal for Gaia
04/02: Gaia's potential for the discovery of circumbinary planets
26/01: DIBs in three hot stars as seen by Gaia's RVS
15/01: The Tycho-Gaia Astrometric Solution
06/01: Close encounters of the stellar kind
2014
12/12: Gaia detects microlensing event
05/12: Cat's Eye Nebula as seen by Gaia
01/12: BFOSC observation of Gaia at L2
24/11: Gaia spectra of six stars
13/11: Omega Centauri as seen by Gaia
02/10: RVS Data Processing
12/09: Gaia discovers first supernova
04/08: Gaia flag arrives at ESAC
29/07: Gaia handover
15/07: Eclipsing binaries
03/07: Asteroids at the "photo finish"
19/06: Calibration image III - Messier 51
05/06: First Gaia BP/RP and RVS spectra
02/06: Sky coverage of Gaia during commissioning
03/04: Gaia source detection
21/02: Sky-background false detections in the sky mapper
14/02: Gaia calibration images II
06/02: Gaia calibration image I
28/01: Gaia telescope light path
17/01: First star shines for Gaia
14/01: Radiation Campaign #4
06/01: Asteroid detection by Gaia
2013
17/12: Gaia in the gantry
12/12: The sky in G magnitude
05/12: Pre-launch release of spectrophotometric standard stars
28/11: From one to one billion pixels
21/11: The Hipparcos all-sky map
15/10: Gaia Sunshield Deployment Test
08/10: Initial Gaia Source List
17/09: CU1 Operations Workshop
11/09: Apsis
26/08: Gaia arrival in French Guiana
20/08: Gaia cartoons
11/07: Model Soyuz Fregat video
01/07: Acoustic Testing
21/06: SOVT
03/06: CU4 meeting #15
04/04: DPCC (CNES) 
26/03: Gaia artist impression 
11/02: Gaia payload testing  
04/01: Space flyby with Gaia-like data
2012
10/12: DPAC OR#2. Testing with Planck
05/11: Galaxy detection with Gaia
09/10: Plot of part of the GUMS-10 catalogue
23/07: "Gaia" meets at Gaia
29/06: The Sky as seen by Gaia
31/05: Panorama of BAM clean room
29/03: GREAT school results
12/03: Scanning-law movie
21/02: Astrometric microlensing and Gaia
03/02: BAM with PMTS
12/01: FPA with all the CCDs and WFSs
2011
14/12: Deployable sunshield
10/11: Earth Trojan search
21/10: First Soyuz liftoff from the French Guiana
20/09: Fast 2D image reconstruction algorithm
05/09: RVS OMA
10/08: 3D distribution of the Gaia catalogue
13/07: Dynamical Attitude Model
22/06: Gaia's view of open clusters
27/05: Accuracy of the stellar transverse velocity
13/05: Vibration test of BAM mirrors
18/04: L. Lindegren, Dr. Honoris Causa of the Observatory of Paris
19/01: Detectability of stars close to Jupiter
05/01: Delivery of the WFS flight models
2010
21/12: The 100th member of CU3
17/11: Nano-JASMINE and AGIS
27/10: Eclipsing binary light curves fitted with DPAC code
13/10: Gaia broad band photometry
28/09: Measuring stellar parameters and interstellar extinction
14/09: M1 mirror
27/08: Quest for the Sun's siblings
 
Please note: Entries from the period 2003-2010 are available in this PDF document.