Abstract

AbstractA remarkable and intriguing fact is that few DB white dwarfs, i.e., objects with a helium-rich atmosphere, are found in the effective temperature range between 45000-30000 K, and this exclusion zone is known as the DB gap. Since the temperatures of the blue and the red edges of the DB gap coincide with the effective temperatures where HeII/III and HeI/II convection zones show up respectively, convective mixing is suspected to be the cause of the appearance of DBs outside the DB gap. Chemical separation due to gravitational settling in the convectively stable atmosphere is then suspected to be the cause of the presence of the DB gap. The white dwarfs which turn back to DBs after the DB gap phase are expected to have a semiconvective layer, which is superadiabatic but convectively stable, when they are located near the red edge of the DB gap. Such white dwarfs are expected to be pulsationally unstable. Discovery of pulsation in them will open up a new class of pulsating white dwarfs to asteroseismic study.

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