Abstract
<p> The chronology of star formation is recorded in the white dwarf luminosity function (WDLF). White dwarf (WD) structure implies a relatively simple connection between WD luminosity and age. First attempts to exploit WDs as chronometers [3,4,6] showed that the WDLF was a map of the history of star formation in the disk, and a significant shortfall of low-luminosity degenerates–the inevitable consequence of the finite age of the disk. The shortfall near log(L/L⊙)≈−4.5 implies a disk age of 6.5–9.5 Gyr [2]. The WDLF from wide common proper motion binaries [5] does not show the shortfall seen by Liebert et al. (1988). This suggests that the disk is at least ∼10.5 Gyr old. Both Liebert et al. (1988) and Oswalt et al. (1996) WDLFs were derived from proper motion catalogs, hence may be affected by significant kinematical bias as well as incompleteness. The simple fact is, the faintest, age-dependent end of the WDLF is not yet reliably determined.</p>
Original language | American English |
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Journal | White Dwarfs (part of NATO Science Series II) |
Volume | 105 |
State | Published - Sep 15 2002 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Luminosity Function
- Photometric Analysis
- Galactic Disk
- Helium-Atmosphere
- Data Release
- Usno-B
- Stars
- Halo
- Catalog
- Deep
Disciplines
- Stars, Interstellar Medium and the Galaxy