Abstract

The lowest mass white dwarfs that can have been produced by single star evolution in the lifetime of the Galaxy have masses of about 0.53 M⊙. There are however several white dwarfs known with significantly lower masses. Evolution in a binary provides a straightforward explanation as the star can lose its envelope before ever burning helium. The products are expected to be short-period binary stars. To test this we have looked at 15 such stars and have found that 8 of them are close binaries. Thus binary evolution does have a major role in the formation of low-mass white dwarfs. We discuss whether the non-detections could also be binary stars.

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