50 research outputs found
Workplans: workshop on planetary nebula observations
This workshop is the second of the WORKPLANS series, which we started in 2016. The main
goal of WORKPLANS is to build up a network of planetary nebulae (PNe) experts to address the main
open questions in the field of PNe research. The specific aims of the WORKPLANS workshop series
are (i) to discuss and prioritize the most important topics to be investigated by the PN community in
the following years; (ii) to establish a network of excellent researchers with complementary expertise;
(iii) to formulate ambitious observing proposals for the most advanced telescopes and instrumentation
presently available (ALMA, SOFIA, VLT, GTC, HST, etc.), addressing those topics; and (iv) to develop
strategies for major proposals to future observatories (JWST, ELT, SPICA, Athena, etc.). To achieve
these goals, WORKPLANS II brought together experts in all key sub-areas of the PNe research field,
namely: analysis and interpretation of PNe observational data; theoretical modeling of gas and
dust emission; evolution from Asymptotic Giant Branch stars (PNe progenitors) to PNe; and the
instrumentation and technical characteristics of the relevant observatoriesI.A. acknowledges the support of Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível
Superior—Brasil (CAPES)—Finance Code 001. This research is supported by Space Telescope Science Institute
grant HST-GO-15953.001-A to RIT (J.K.). T.U. was supported by NASA under grant NNX15AF24G issued
through the Science Mission Directorate. E.V. acknowledges support from the “On the rocks II project” funded
by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades under grant PGC2018-101950-B-I00. The Workshop was organized with the financial support of the Lorentz Center, which was provided by the Netherlands
Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) and the Leiden Universit
The Formation of Fullerenes in Planetary Nebulae
In the last decade, fullerenes have been detected in a variety of astrophysical environments, with the majority being found in planetary nebulae. Laboratory experiments have provided us with insights into the conditions and pathways that can lead to fullerene formation, but it is not clear precisely what led to the formation of astrophysical fullerenes in planetary nebulae. We review some of the available evidence, and propose a mechanism where fullerene formation in planetary nebulae is the result of a two-step process where carbonaceous dust is first formed under unusual conditions; then, the fullerenes form when this dust is being destroyed
The [Ne III]/[Ne II] line ratio in NGC 253
We present results of the mapping of the nucleus of the starburst galaxy NGC 253 and its immediate surroundings using the Infrared Spectrograph on board the Spitzer Space Telescope. The map is centered on the nucleus of the galaxy and spans the inner 800 × 688 pc^2. We perform a brief investigation of the implications of these measurement on the properties of the star formation in this region using theories developed to explain the deficiency of massive stars in starbursts
Fullerenes in circumstellar and interstellar environments
We recently identified several emission bands in the Spitzer-IRS spectrum of
the unusual planetary nebula Tc 1 with the infrared active vibrational modes of
the neutral fullerene species C60 and C70. Since then, the fullerene bands have
been detected in a variety of sources representing circumstellar and
interstellar environments. Abundance estimates suggest that C60 represents
~0.1%-1.5% of the available carbon in those sources. The observed relative band
intensities in various sources are not fully compatible with single-photon
heating and fluorescent cooling, and are better reproduced by a thermal
distribution at least in some sources. The observational data suggests that
fullerenes form in the circumstellar environments of evolved stars, and survive
in the interstellar medium. Precisely how they form is still a matter of
debate.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. To appear in the proceedings of IAU symposium
280 "The Molecular Universe
Automatically calculating the apparent depths of pits using the Pit Topography from Shadows (PITS) tool
Pits, or pit craters, are near-circular depressions found in planetary surfaces, which are generally formed through gravitational collapse. Pits will be primary targets for future space exploration and habitability for their presence on most rocky Solar System surfaces and their potential to be entrances to sub-surface cavities. This is particularly true on Mars, where caves have been simulated to harbour stable reserves of ice water across much of the surface. Caves can also provide natural shelter from the high radiation dosages experienced at the surface. Since pits are rarely found to have corresponding high-resolution elevation data, tools are required for approximating their depths in order to find those which are the ideal candidates for follow-up remote investigation and future exploration. The Pit Topography from Shadows (PITS) tool has been developed to automatically calculate the apparent depth of a pit (h) by measuring the width of its shadow as it appears in satellite imagery. The tool requires just one cropped single- or multi-band image of a pit to calculate a profile of h along the length of the shadow, thus allowing for depth calculation where altimetry or stereo image data is not available. We also present a method for correcting shadow width measurements made in non-nadir observations for all possible values of emission and solar/satellite azimuth angles. Shadows are extracted using image segmentation in the form of k-means clustering and silhouette analysis. Across 19 shadow-labelled Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter red-band HiRISE images of Atypical Pit Craters (APCs) from the Mars Global Cave Candidate Catalog (MGC3), PITS detected 99.6 per cent of all shadow pixels (with 94.8 per cent of all detections being true shadow pixels). Following this testing, PITS has been applied to 123 red-band HiRISE images containing 88 APCs, which revealed an improvement in the variation of the calculated h due to emission angle correction, and also found 10 APCs that could be good candidates for cave entrances on Mars due to their h profiles
An in-depth view of the mid-infrared properties of point sources and the diffuse ISM in the SMC giant HII region, N66
The focus of this work is to study mid-infrared point sources and the diffuse interstellar medium (ISM) in the low-metallicity (~0.2 ⊙) giant HII region N66 using the Spitzer Space Telescope's Infrared Spectrograph. We study 14 targeted infrared point sources as well as spectra of the diffuse ISM that is representative of both the photodissociation regions (PDRs) and the HII regions. Among the point source spectra, we spectroscopically confirm that the brightest mid-infrared point source is a massive embedded young stellar object, we detect silicates in emission associated with two young stellar clusters, and we observe spectral features of a known B[e] supergiant that are more commonly associated with Herbig Be stars. In the diffuse ISM, we provide additional evidence that the very small grain population is being photodestroyed in the hard radiation field. The 11.3 μm PAH complex emission exhibits an unexplained centroid shift in both the point source and ISM spectra that should be investigated at higher signal-to-noise and resolution. Unlike studies of other regions, the 6.2 μm and 7.7 μm band fluxes are decoupled; the data points cover a large range of I7.7/I11.3 PAH ratio values within a narrow band of I6.2/I11.3 ratio values. Furthermore, there is a spread in PAH ionization, being more neutral in the dense PDR where the radiation field is relatively soft, but ionized in the diffuse ISM/PDR. By contrast, the PAH size distribution appears to be independent of local ionization state. Important to unresolved studies of extragalactic low-metallicity star-forming regions, we find that emission from the infrared-bright point sources accounts for only 20-35% of the PAH emission from the entire region. These results make a comparative dataset to other star-forming regions with similarly hard and strong radiation fields
HERUS: the far-IR/submm spectral energy distributions of local ULIRGs and photometric atlas
We present the Herschel-SPIRE photometric atlas for a complete flux limited sample of 43 local ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs), selected at 60 μm by IRAS, as part of the HERschel ULIRG Survey (HERUS). Photometry observations were obtained using the SPIRE instrument at 250, 350, and 500 μm. We describe these observations, present the results, and combine the new observations with data from IRAS to examine the far-infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of these sources. We fit the observed SEDs of HERUS objects with a simple parametrized modified blackbody model, where temperature and emissivity β are free parameters. We compare the fitted values to those of non-ULIRG local galaxies, and find, in agreement with earlier results, that HERUS ULIRGs have warmer dust (median temperature T = 37.9 ± 4.7 K compared to 21.3 ± 3.4 K) but a similar β distribution (median β = 1.7 compared to 1.8) to the Herschel reference sample (HRS, Cortese et al. 2014) galaxies. Dust masses are found to be in the range of 107.5–109 M⊙, significantly higher than that of HRS sources. We compare our results for local ULIRGs with higher redshift samples selected at 250 and 850 μm. These latter sources generally have cooler dust and/or redder 100-to-250 μm colours than our 60 μm-selected ULIRGs. We show that this difference may in part be the result of the sources being selected at different wavelengths rather than being a simple indication of rapid evolution in the properties of the population
JWST observations of the Ring Nebula (NGC 6720): I. Imaging of the rings, globules, and arcs
We present JWST images of the well-known planetary nebula NGC 6720 (the Ring
Nebula), covering wavelengths from 1.6m to 25 m. The bright shell is
strongly fragmented with some 20 000 dense globules, bright in H, with a
characteristic diameter of 0.2 arcsec and density -
cm. The shell contains a thin ring of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon
(PAH) emission. H is found throughout the shell and in the halo. H in
the halo may be located on the swept-up walls of a biconal polar flow. The
central cavity is shown to be filled with high ionization gas and shows two
linear structures. The central star is located 2 arcsec from the emission
centroid of the cavity and shell. Linear features (`spikes') extend outward
from the ring, pointing away from the central star. Hydrodynamical simulations
are shown which reproduce the clumping and possibly the spikes. Around ten
low-contrast, regularly spaced concentric arc-like features are present; they
suggest orbital modulation by a low-mass companion with a period of about 280
yr. A previously known much wider companion is located at a projected
separation of about 15 000 au; we show that it is an M2-M4 dwarf. The system is
therefore a triple star. These features, including the multiplicity, are
similar to those seen in the Southern Ring Nebula (NGC 3132) and may be a
common aspect of such nebulae.Comment: 25 pages, 23 figures. Submitted to Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Society. Corrected typos in metadat
Characterisation of the Planetary Nebula Tc 1 Based on VLT X-Shooter Observations
We present a detailed analysis of deep VLT/X-Shooter observations of the
planetary nebula Tc 1. We calculate gas temperature, density, extinction, and
abundances for several species from the empirical analysis of the total line
fluxes. In addition, a spatially resolved analysis of the most intense lines
provides the distribution of such quantities across the nebula. The new data
reveal that several lines exhibit a double peak spectral profile consistent
with the blue- and red-shifted components of an expanding spherical shell. The
study of such components allowed us to construct for the first time a
three-dimensional morphological model, which reveals that Tc 1 is a slightly
elongated spheroid with an equatorial density enhancement seen almost pole on.
A few bright lines present extended wings (with velocities up to a few hundred
km/s), but the mechanism producing them is not clear. We constructed
photoionization models for the main shell of Tc 1. The models predict the
central star temperature and luminosity, as well as the nebular density and
abundances similar to previous studies. Our models indicate that Tc 1 is
located at a distance of approximately 2 kpc. We report the first detection of
the [Kr III] 6825 A emission line, from which we determine the Krypton
abundance. Our model indicates that the main shell of Tc 1 is matter bounded;
leaking H ionizing photons may explain the ionization of its faint AGB-remnant
halo.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 27 pages, 20 figure