- #1
qraal
- 790
- 3
Just pondering Eric Agol's recent paper on White Dwarf habitable zones and the pace of cooling of white dwarfs (WDs.) He uses models of Carbon core WDs with helium atmospheres, but I am wondering if pure helium WDs would last three times longer. Opacity from the atmosphere slows down heat loss significantly else WDs would cool very quickly since the interior is nearly isothermal from highly efficient heat conduction. Thus there should be three times the heat energy available since helium masses one third carbon and energy of a gas depends on the numbers of atoms, not the whole mass.
In theory higher opacity in Red Giant stars should blow off enough mass before the Red Giant Tip and the Helium flash, so that the Helium Main Sequence is never initiated. Thus a pure helium WD should be possible, given sufficient mass-loss by its Main Sequence precursor. So instead of a maximum CHZ lifetime of 8 Gyr, there should be a 24 Gyr CHZ lifetime for a well placed planet.
In theory higher opacity in Red Giant stars should blow off enough mass before the Red Giant Tip and the Helium flash, so that the Helium Main Sequence is never initiated. Thus a pure helium WD should be possible, given sufficient mass-loss by its Main Sequence precursor. So instead of a maximum CHZ lifetime of 8 Gyr, there should be a 24 Gyr CHZ lifetime for a well placed planet.