Excess infrared flux from white dwarf stars is likely to arise from a dusty debris disk or a cool companion. In this work, we present near-infrared spectroscopic observations with Keck/MOSFIRE, Gemini/GNIRS, and Gemini/Flamingos-2 of seven white dwarfs with infrared excesses identified in previous studies. We confirmed the presence of dust disks around four white dwarfs (GaiaJ0611-6931, GaiaJ0006+2858, GaiaJ2100+2122, and WD0145+234) as well as two new white dwarf-brown dwarf pairs (GaiaJ0052+4505 and GaiaJ0603+4518). In three of the dust disk systems, we detected for the first time near-infrared metal emissions (MgI, SiI, and possibly FeI) from a gaseous component of the disk. We developed a new Markov Chain Monte Carlo framework to constrain the geometric properties of each dust disk. In three systems, the dust disk and the gas disk appear to coincide spatially. For the two brown dwarf-white dwarf pairs, we identified broad molecular absorption features typically seen in L dwarfs. The origin of the infrared excess around GaiaJ0723+6301 remains a mystery. Our study underlines how near-infrared spectroscopy can be used to determine sources of infrared excess around white dwarfs, which has now been detected photometrically in hundreds of systems.
Cone search capability for table J/AJ/166/5/table1 (White dwarf parameters)