The companion star is a dense
white dwarf star. This category of stellar object has reached the end of its evolutionary life span and is no longer generating energy through
nuclear fusion. Instead, under normal circumstances, a white dwarf will steadily radiate away its excess energy, mainly stored heat, growing cooler and dimmer over the course of many billions of years.
Evolution Nearly all small and intermediate-mass stars (below about 8~9 ) will end up as white dwarfs once they have exhausted their supply of
thermonuclear fuel. Such stars spend most of their energy-producing life span as a
main-sequence star. The time that a star spends on the main sequence depends primarily on its mass, with the lifespan decreasing with increasing mass. Thus, for IK Pegasi B to have become a white dwarf before component A, it must once have been more massive than component A. In fact, the progenitor of IK Pegasi B is thought to have had a mass between 5 and . As the hydrogen fuel at the core of the progenitor of IK Pegasi B was consumed, it evolved into a
red giant. The inner core contracted until hydrogen burning commenced in a shell surrounding the helium core. To compensate for the temperature increase, the outer envelope expanded to many times the radius it possessed as a main sequence star. When the core reached a temperature and density where helium could start to undergo fusion this star contracted and became what is termed a
horizontal branch star. That is, it belonged to a group of stars that fall upon a roughly horizontal line on the H-R diagram. The fusion of helium formed an inert core of carbon and oxygen. When helium was exhausted in the core a helium-burning shell formed in addition to the hydrogen-burning one and the star moved to what astronomers term the
asymptotic giant branch, or AGB. (This is a track leading to the upper-right corner of the H-R diagram.) If the star had sufficient mass, in time
carbon fusion could begin in the core, producing
oxygen,
neon and
magnesium. The outer envelope of a red giant or AGB star can expand to several hundred times the radius of the Sun, occupying a radius of about (3 AU) in the case of the pulsating AGB star
Mira. This is well beyond the current average separation between the two stars in IK Pegasi, so during this time period the two stars shared a common envelope. As a result, the outer atmosphere of IK Pegasi A may have received an isotope enhancement. is being created by a star evolving into a white dwarf.
NASA & ESA image. Some time after an inert oxygen-carbon (or oxygen-magnesium-neon) core formed, thermonuclear fusion began to occur along two shells concentric with the core region; hydrogen was burned along the outermost shell, while helium fusion took place around the inert core. However, this double-shell phase is unstable, so it produced thermal pulses that caused large-scale mass ejections from the star's outer envelope. This ejected material formed an immense cloud of material called a
planetary nebula. All but a small fraction of the hydrogen envelope was driven away from the star, leaving behind a white dwarf remnant composed primarily of the inert core.
Composition and structure The interior of IK Pegasi B may be composed wholly of carbon and oxygen; alternatively, if its progenitor underwent
carbon burning, it may have a core of oxygen and neon, surrounded by a mantle enriched with carbon and oxygen. In either case, the exterior of IK Pegasi B is covered by an atmosphere of almost pure hydrogen, which gives this star its
stellar classification of DA. Due to higher
atomic mass, any helium in the envelope will have sunk beneath the hydrogen layer. The entire mass of the star is supported by
electron degeneracy pressure—a
quantum mechanical effect that limits the amount of matter that can be squeezed into a given volume. electron gas model. At an estimated , IK Pegasi B is considered to be a high-mass white dwarf. Although its radius has not been observed directly, it can be estimated from known theoretical relationships between the mass and radius of white dwarfs, giving a value of about 0.60% of the
Sun's radius. (A different source gives a value of 0.72%, so there remains some uncertainty in this result.) Thus this star packs a mass greater than the Sun into a volume roughly the size of the Earth, giving an indication of this object's extreme
density. The massive, compact nature of a white dwarf produces a strong
surface gravity. Astronomers denote this value by the decimal
logarithm of the
gravitational force in
cgs units, or log
g. For IK Pegasi B, log
g is 8.95. By comparison, log
g for the Earth is 2.99. Thus the surface gravity on IK Pegasi is over 900,000 times the gravitational force on the Earth. The effective surface temperature of IK Pegasi B is estimated to be about , making it a strong source of
ultraviolet radiation. Under normal conditions this white dwarf would continue to cool for more than a billion years, while its radius would remain essentially unchanged. ==Future evolution==