An 8.8 minute orbital period eclipsing detached double white dwarf binary (2010.03555v2)
Abstract: We report the discovery of ZTF J2243+5242, an eclipsing double white dwarf binary with an orbital period of just $8.8$ minutes, the second known eclipsing binary with an orbital period less than ten minutes. The system likely consists of two low-mass white dwarfs, and will merge in approximately 400,000 years to form either an isolated hot subdwarf or an R Coronae Borealis star. Like its $6.91\, \rm min$ counterpart, ZTF J1539+5027, ZTF J2243+5242 will be among the strongest gravitational wave sources detectable by the space-based gravitational-wave detector The Laser Space Interferometer Antenna (LISA) because its gravitational-wave frequency falls near the peak of LISA's sensitivity. Based on its estimated distance of $d=2120{+131}_{-115}\,\rm pc$, LISA should detect the source within its first few months of operation, and should achieve a signal-to-noise ratio of $87\pm5$ after four years. We find component masses of $M_A= 0.349{+0.093}{-0.074}\,M\odot$ and $M_B=0.384{+0.114}{-0.074}\,M\odot$, radii of $R_A=0.0308{+0.0026}{-0.0025}\,R\odot$ and $R_B = 0.0291{+0.0032}{-0.0024}\,R\odot$, and effective temperatures of $T_A=22200{+1800}_{-1600}\,\rm K$ and $T_B=16200{+1200}_{-1000}\,\rm K$. We determined all of these properties, and the distance to this system, using only photometric measurements, demonstrating a feasible way to estimate parameters for the large population of optically faint ($r>21 \, m_{\rm AB}$) gravitational-wave sources which the Vera Rubin Observatory (VRO) and LISA should identify.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.