posted on 2024-07-09, 17:31authored byD. S. Davis, H. B. Richer, I. R. King, J. Anderson, J. Coffey, G. G. Fahlman, Jarrod HurleyJarrod Hurley, J. S. Kalirai
We have examined the radial distribution of white dwarfs over a single Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys field in the nearby globular cluster NGC 6397. In relaxed populations, such as in a globular cluster, stellar velocity dispersion, and hence radial distribution, is directly dependent on stellar masses. The progenitors of very young cluster white dwarfs had a mass of ~0.8 M-circle-dot, while the white dwarfs themselves have a mass of ~0.5 M-circle-dot. We thus expect young white dwarfs to have a concentrated radial distribution (like that of their progenitors) that becomes more extended over several relaxation times to mimic that of ~0.5 M-circle-dot main-sequence stars. However, we observe young white dwarfs to have a significantly extended radial distribution compared both with the most massive main-sequence stars in the cluster and with old white dwarfs.