scholarly journals Detailed studies of IPHAS sources - III. The highly extinguished bipolar planetary nebula IPHASX J191104.8+060845

Author(s):  
J B Rodríguez-González ◽  
L Sabin ◽  
J A Toalá ◽  
S Zavala ◽  
G Ramos-Larios ◽  
...  

Abstract We present the first detailed study of the bipolar planetary nebula (PN) IPHASX J191104.8+060845 (PN G 040.6−01.5) discovered as part of the Isaac Newton Telescope Photometric Hα Survey of the Northern Galactic plane (IPHAS). We present Nordic Optical Telescope (NOT) narrow-band images to unveil its true morphology. This PN consists of a main cavity with two newly uncovered extended low-surface brightness lobes located towards the NW and SE directions. Using near-IR WISE images we unveiled the presence of a barrel like structure, which surrounds the main cavity, which would explain the dark lane towards the equatorial regions. We also use Gran Telescopio de Canarias (GTC) spectra to study the physical properties of this PN. We emphasise the potential of old PNe detected in IPHAS to study the final stages of the evolution of the circumstellar medium around solar-like stars.

1989 ◽  
Vol 131 ◽  
pp. 220-220
Author(s):  
A. Manchado ◽  
S. R. Pottasch ◽  
A. Mampaso

We have obtained long-slit low resolution spectra (7.5 A resolution) of a sample of 13 low surface brightness planetary nebulae using the 2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope (La Palma) with the Image Photon Counting System (IPCS) covering a spectral range from 3300 A to 7300 A. From those spectra we calculated the ionic and total abundances of 0, N, Ne and Ar. Variations in the ionization structure between the inner and the outer part are found in some nebulae although the total abundances appear not to change significantly along the nebulae.


1989 ◽  
Vol 131 ◽  
pp. 314-314
Author(s):  
Michael Grewing ◽  
Luciana Bianchi

The nucleus of the large, low surface brightness planetary nebula Abell 35 (Abell 1966) belongs to the small group of objects which are known to have a binary nucleus. From his photometric and spectroscopic study of the object, Jacoby (1981, Astrophys. J. 244,903) found the star SAO 181201, a G8 IV star, to be located near the apex of the parabolic region of enhanced [O III] emision which is completelely absent in H∝. The G8 IV star can clearly not be the ionising source for this nebulosity nor the larger scale nebulosity of the PN proper. Jacoby concluded that the central object must be a binary and suggested a hot subdwarf as the second component, which is masked in the optical by the bright SAO star. This interpretation is supported by the analysis of the DDO and UBVRI photometry, which shows that the observed colour indices can be fitted if one assumes a 50.000 K blackbody companion.


2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (S283) ◽  
pp. 9-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quentin A. Parker ◽  
David J. Frew ◽  
Agnes Acker ◽  
Brent Miszalski

AbstractOver the last decade Galactic planetary nebula discoveries have entered a golden age due to the emergence of high sensitivity, high resolution narrow-band surveys of the Galactic plane. These have been coupled with access to complimentary, deep, multi-wavelength surveys across near-IR, mid-IR and radio regimes in particular from both ground-based and space-based telescopes. These have provided powerful diagnostic and discovery capabilities. In this review these advances are put in the context of what has gone before, what we are uncovering now and through the window of opportunity that awaits in the future. The astrophysical potential of this brief but key phase of late stage stellar evolution is finally being realised.


2020 ◽  
Vol 496 (1) ◽  
pp. 959-973
Author(s):  
V M A Gómez-González ◽  
J A Toalá ◽  
M A Guerrero ◽  
H Todt ◽  
L Sabin ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We present the analysis of the planetary nebula (PN) NGC 2371 around the [Wolf–Rayet] (WR) star WD 0722+295. Our Isaac Newton Telescope intermediate dispersion spectrograph spectra, in conjunction with archival optical and ultraviolet images, unveil in unprecedented detail the high ionization of NGC 2371. The nebula has an apparent multipolar morphology, with two pairs of lobes protruding from a barrel-like central cavity, a pair of dense low ionization knots misaligned with the symmetry axis embedded within the central cavity, and a high-excitation halo mainly detected in He ii. The abundances from the barrel-like central cavity and dense knots agree with abundance determinations for other PNe with [WR]-type central stars of PNe. We suggest that the densest knots inside NGC 2371 are the oldest structures, remnant of a dense equatorial structure, while the main nebular shell and outer lobes resulted from a latter ejection that ended the stellar evolution. The analysis of position–velocity diagrams produced from our high-quality spectra suggests that NGC 2371 has a bipolar shape with each lobe presenting a double structure protruding from a barrel-like central region. The analysis of the spectra of WD 0722+295 results in similar stellar parameters as previously reported. We corroborate that the spectral subtype corresponds with a [WO1] type.


1983 ◽  
Vol 103 ◽  
pp. 544-544
Author(s):  
K.G. Henize ◽  
A.P. Fairall

A low surface brightness planetary nebula with weak ring structure and a diameter 22 arcsec has been discovered in the southwest edge of the open cluster NGC 6067. A calibrated spectrum shows strong He II 4686 (80% Hβ) and an Hα/Hβ ratio of 5.8. The Hα/Hβ ratio yields c = 0.88 which corresponds to Av = 1.88. This is significantly greater than Av for the cluster (1.17) and leads to a distance for the nebula of 3370 pc assuming extinction to be uniform with distance. This leads to a radius of 0.18 pc and a mass of 0.07 solar masses (assuming ε = 0.5).


2020 ◽  
Vol 634 ◽  
pp. A47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Monreal-Ibero ◽  
Jeremy R. Walsh

Aims. Two-dimensional spectroscopic data for the whole extent of the NGC 3132 planetary nebula have been obtained. We deliver a reduced data-cube and high-quality maps on a spaxel-by-spaxel basis for the many emission lines falling within the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) spectral coverage over a range in surface brightness >1000. Physical diagnostics derived from the emission line images, opening up a variety of scientific applications, are discussed. Methods. Data were obtained during MUSE commissioning on the European Southern Observatory (ESO) Very Large Telescope and reduced with the standard ESO pipeline. Emission lines were fitted by Gaussian profiles. The dust extinction, electron densities, and temperatures of the ionised gas and abundances were determined using Python and PyNeb routines. Results. The delivered datacube has a spatial size of ~63′′× 123′′, corresponding to ~0.26 × 0.51 pc2 for the adopted distance, and a contiguous wavelength coverage of 4750–9300 Å at a spectral sampling of 1.25 Å pix−1. The nebula presents a complex reddening structure with high values (c(Hβ) ~ 0.4) at the rim. Density maps are compatible with an inner high-ionisation plasma at moderate high density (~1000 cm−3), while the low-ionisation plasma presents a structure in density peaking at the rim with values ~700 cm−3. Median Te, using different diagnostics, decreases according to the sequence [N II], [S II] →[S III] → [O I] → He I → Paschen Jump. Likewise, the range of temperatures covered by recombination lines is much larger than those obtained from collisionally excited lines (CELs), with large spatial variations within the nebula. If these differences were due to the existence of high density clumps, as previously suggested, these spatial variations would suggest changes in the properties and/or distribution of the clumps within the nebula. We determined a median helium abundance He/H = 0.124, with slightly higher values at the rim and outer shell. The range of measured ionic abundances for light elements are compatible with literature values. Our kinematic analysis nicely illustrates the power of 2D kinematic information in many emission lines, which sheds light on the intrinsic structure of the nebula. Specifically, our derived velocity maps support a geometry for the nebula that is similar to the diabolo-like model previously proposed, but oriented with its major axis roughly at PA ~ −22°. We identified two low-surface brightness arc-like structures towards the northern and southern tips of the nebula, with high extinction, high helium abundance, and strong low-ionisation emission lines. They are spatially coincident with some extended low-surface brightness mid-infrared emission. The characteristics of the features suggest that they could be the consequence of precessing jets caused by the binary star system. A simple 1D Cloudy model is able to reproduce the strong lines in the integrated spectrum of the whole nebula with an accuracy of ~15%. Conclusions. Together with similar work with MUSE on NGC 7009, the present study illustrates the enormous potential of wide field integral field spectrographs for the study of Galactic planetary nebulae.


1993 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 390-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.R. Walsh ◽  
N.A. Walton ◽  
S.R. Pottasch

A comprehensive spectrophotometric survey of the central stars of planetary nebulae with known or suspected binary star nuclei (BSPN) is underway. The aims of this programme are: to determine the nature of the companion to the ionising star of the nebula; to estimate the spectroscopic distance from the spectral type and magnitude of the companion and thence to determine the luminosity of the hot star; to compare the morphologies and excitation/abundance characteristics of BSPN with those of PN produced by single star evolution. The advantage of the distance determined from this simple method is that it is independent of any assumptions about the planetary nebula, in contrast to most other PN distance estimators.To date 75 percent of known or suspected BSPN have been observed with the 2.5m Isaac Newton Telescope and the 1.5m ESO spectroscopic telescope at low and intermediate dispersions. A selection of preliminary results from the programme is presented, highlighting the binary central stars of NGC 246 and Abell 65.


1983 ◽  
Vol 103 ◽  
pp. 523-524
Author(s):  
K. B. Kwitter ◽  
G. H. Jacoby ◽  
D. G. Lawrie

YM29 is a nearby, filamentary, low surface brightness nebula whose spectrum exhibits lines of both high and low excitation. Johnson and Rubin (1971, Ap. J. 163, 151) observed YM29 as a weak radio source; despite uncertainties as to the thermal nature of the radio spectrum and their lack of a good optical spectrum, they classified YM29 as a peculiar planetary nebula. Based on photographic spectra, Liebowitz (1975, Ap. J. 196, 191) has reported that in YM29 the (N II) lines at λλ 6548, 6584 are several times the strength of Hα.


1993 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 34-34
Author(s):  
S. Tamura ◽  
R. Weinberger

While examining Palomar Observatory Sky Survey prints for various purposes, we came upon a number of hitherto uncatalogued nebulous objects, all of them of low surface brightness. Four of them are considered by us as new planetary nebula candidates due to their morphology. For the brightest one of them, spectroscopic observations were carried out with the Cassegrain spectrograph attached to the 74-inch telescope of the Okayama Astrophysical Observatory: this object (1 = 65.49°, b = +3.18°) is clearly confirmed as a planetary nebula and obviously is in an advanced stage in its evolution; in Fig. 1, a spectrum of it is shown.


1979 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 315-316
Author(s):  
D. J. King ◽  
K. N. R. Taylor

About 20 years ago de Vaucouleurs (1955, 1960) drew attention to faint but extensive nebulosity in the region of the South Celestial Pole. He tentatively identified it as being emission nebulosity, excited by OB stars in the overlying galactic plane. The extent of these nebulae has become even more apparent in recent years on IIIa-J plates taken for the U.K. Schmidt survey of the southern sky. From a study of survey plates covering the sky south of declination 80° a map has been prepared of the nebulosity visible in the region. A study made of this ∽nebulosity suggests that it is predominantly reflection nebulosity, with the main source of illumination being integrated starlight of the overlying Carina spiral arm. The bulk of it is of very low surface brightness (fainter than about 26 mag. per square arcsec) and appears to be in the form of a broken layer underlying the local galactic plane at an altitude of ∽ 40–80 pc. There are a number of brighter nebulous patches and filaments, frequently highly structured on a scale of minutes of arc, and extending across several degrees, usually parallel to the galactic plane.


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