2,328 research outputs found
Spatially resolved kinematic observations of the planetary nebulae Hen 3-1333 and Hen 2-113
We have performed integral field spectroscopy of the planetary nebulae Hen
3-1333 (PNG332.9-09.9) and Hen 2-113 (PNG321.0+03.9), which are unusual in
exhibiting dual-dust chemistry and multipolar lobes but also ionized by
late-type [WC 10] central stars. The spatially resolved velocity distributions
of the H emission line were used to determine their primary
orientations. The integrated H emission profiles indicate that Hen
3-1333 and Hen 2-113 expand with velocities of ~ 32 and 23 km/s, respectively.
The Hubble Space Telescope observations suggest that these planetary nebulae
have two pairs of tenuous lobes extending upwardly from their bright compact
cores. From three-dimensional geometric models, the primary lobes of Hen 3-1333
and Hen 2-113 were found to have inclination angles of about -30 and
40 relative to the line of sight, and position angles of
-15 and 65 measured east of north in the equatorial
coordinate system, respectively.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Proposed nomenclature for Extragalactic Planetary Nebulae
The ability to identify and distinguish between the wide variety of celestial
objects benefits from application of a systematic and logical nomenclature.
This often includes value-added information within the naming convention which
can aid in placing the object positionally either via an RA/DEC or l,b
concatenation. All new nomenclatures should be created following IAU
guidelines. However as the number density of specific object types on the sky
increases, as in the case of PN in external galaxies, a useful positional
identifier becomes problematic. This brief but timely paper attempts to
progress the debate on this vexing issue for the case of extragalactic
planetary nebulae (EPN). There is a clear need to rationalise the current
ad-hoc system now that many thousands of Extragalactic PN are being discovered.Comment: 3 pages, no figures, LaTeX, to be published in Proceedings of the ESO
workshop on Planetary Nebulae beyond the Milky Way held at ESO, Garching, May
19-21, 200
Extragalactic Planetary Nebulae: Observational Challenges & Future Prospects
The study of extragalactic planetary nebulae (EPN) is a rapidly expanding
field. The advent of powerful new instrumentation such as the PN spectrograph
has led to an avalanche of new EPN discoveries both within and between
galaxies. We now have thousands of EPN detections in a heterogeneous selection
of nearby galaxies and their local environments, dwarfing the combined galactic
detection efforts of the last century. Key scientific motivations driving this
rapid growth in EPN research and discovery have been the use of the PNLF as a
standard candle, as dynamical tracers of their host galaxies and dark matter
and as probes of Galactic evolution. This is coupled with the basic utility of
PN as laboratories of nebula physics and the consequent comparison with theory
where population differences, abundance variations and star formation history
within and between stellar systems informs both stellar and galactic evolution.
Here we pose some of the burning questions, discuss some of the observational
challenges and outline some of the future prospects of this exciting,
relatively new, research area as we strive to go fainter, image finer, see
further and survey faster than ever before and over a wider wavelength regimeComment: 4 pages, no figures, LaTeX, to be published in Proceedings of the ESO
workshop on Planetary Nebulae beyond the Milky Way held at ESO, Garching, May
19-21, 200
H-alpha Stacked Images Reveal Large Numbers of PNe in the LMC
Our new, deep, high resolution H-alpha and matching R-band UKST
multi-exposure stack of the central 25 sq. degrees of the LMC promises to
provide an unprecedented homogeneous sample of >1,000 new PNe. Our preliminary
2dF spectroscopy on the AAT has vindicated our selection process and confirmed
136 new PNe and 57 emission-line stars out of a sample of 263 candidate sources
within an initial 2.5 sq. deg. area. To date approximately one third of the
entire LMC has been scanned for candidates (~7.5 sq.deg.). More than 750 new
emission sources have been catalogued so far along with independent
re-identification of all known and possible PNe found from other surveys. Once
our image analysis is complete, we plan comprehensive spectroscopic follow-up
of the whole sample, not only to confirm our PN candidates but also to derive
nebula temperatures and densities which, with the aid of photoionization
modeling, will yield stellar parameters which are vital for constructing H-R
diagrams for these objects. A prime objective of the survey is to produce a
Luminosity Function which will be the most accurate and comprehensive ever
derived in terms of numbers, magnitude range and evolutionary state; offering
significant new insights into the LMC's evolutionary history. The observation
and measurement of our newly discovered AGB halos around 60% of these PN will
also assist in determining the initial- to final-mass ratios for this phase of
stellar evolution.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX, to be published in Proceedings of the ESO
workshop on Planetary Nebulae beyond the Milky Way held at ESO, Garching, May
19-21, 200
Extending the RP survey to the outer LMC
We are extending our search for faint PNe in the LMC to include the outer 56
deg2 area not covered in the original UKST survey of the central 25 deg2
region. Candidate PNe have been selected using the Magellanic Cloud Emission
Line Survey (MCELS) and the first round of observations has yielded 93 new LMC
PNe while confirming the 102 previously known PNe in the outer LMC. We plan to
continue our spectroscopic object identification program until we cover all our
remaining candidates in the survey area. These observations, providing medium
and high resolution spectra from 3650 Ang to 6900 Ang will additionally be used
to measure fluxes for a series of research projects including luminosity
functions, abundances and LMC kinematics.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, IAU283 poster contributio
A New Population of Planetary Nebulae Discovered in the Large Magellanic Cloud (I): Preliminary Sample
We report our initial discovery of 73 new planetary nebulae (PNe) in the
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) following confirmatory 2dF spectroscopy on the
Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT). Preliminary candidate sources come from a 10
per cent sub-area of our new deep, high resolution H-alpha map of the central
25 deg. square of the LMC obtained with the UK Schmidt Telescope (UKST). The
depth of the high resolution map was extended to Requiv~22 for H-alpha (4.5 x
10-17 ergs cm-2 s-1 Ang-1) by a process of multi-exposure median co-addition of
a dozen 2-hour H-alpha exposures. The resulting map is at least 1-magnitude
deeper than the best wide-field narrow-band LMC images currently available.
This depth, combined with our selection technique, has also led to the
discovery of extended AGB halos around many new and previously known LMC PNe
for the first time. Once complete, our new survey is expected to triple the LMC
PN population and have significant implications for the LMC PN luminosity
function, kinematics, abundance gradients chemical evolution and, via study of
the AGB halos, the initial to final mass relation for low to intermediate mass
stars.Comment: 14 pages, 21 figures (zipped). Accepted for publication in Mmonthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ
Planetary Nebula Surveys: Past, Present and Future
In this review we cover the detection, identification and astrophysical
importance of planetary nebulae (PN). The legacy of the historic Perek &
Kohoutek and Acker et al. catalogues is briefly covered before highlighting the
more recent but significant progress in PN discoveries in our Galaxy and the
Magellanic Clouds. We place particular emphasis on the major MASH and the IPHAS
catalogues, which, over the last decade alone, have essentially doubled
Galactic and LMC PN numbers. We then discuss the increasing role and importance
that multi-wavelength data is playing in both the detection of candidate PN and
the elimination of PN mimics that have seriously biased previous PN
compilations. The prospects for future surveys and current efforts and
prospects for PN detections in external galaxies are briefly discussed due to
their value both as cosmic distance indicators and as kinematical probes of
galaxies and dark matter properties.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, Proceedings of the Asymmetric Planetary Nebula V
Conference (Invited Review, Lake District, England, June 2010
A New Population of Planetary Nebulae Discovered in the Large Magellanic Cloud (IV): The Outer LMC
We have extended our PNe survey to the outer ~64deg^2 of the LMC using maps
from the Magellanic Cloud Emission Line Survey (MCELS) and the UK Schmidt
Telescope (UKST) H-alpha survey. Although the MCELS survey has poorer ~5
arcsecond resolution than both the UKST H-alpha survey and the original H-alpha
median stacked map in the LMC's central 25deg^2, it has the advantage of
additional narrow-band filters at H-alpha, [OIII] and [SII] providing improved
diagnostic capabilities. Using these data to uncover new emission line
candidates we have so far spectroscopically confirmed an extra 61 LMC PNe which
we present here for the first time. We have also independently recovered and
spectroscopically confirmed 107 of the 109 (98%) PNe that were previously known
to exist in the outer LMC. The majority of our newly discovered and previously
known PNe were confirmed using the AAOmega, multi-object fibre spectroscopy
system on the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) and the 6dF multi-object
spectrograph on the UKST. These newly identified PNe were cross-checked against
extant multi-wavelength imaging surveys in the near and mid-infrared in
particular and against the latest emission-line ratio diagnostic plots for
improved confidence in PNe identification.Comment: 24 pages, 22 figures, accepted MNRAS main journal stt 160
Observations and three-dimensional ionization structure of the planetary nebula SuWt 2
The planetary nebula SuWt 2 (PN G311.0+02.4), is an unusual object with a
prominent, inclined central emission ellipse and faint bipolar extensions. It
has two A-type stars in a proven binary system at the centre. However, the
radiation from these two central stars is too soft to ionize the surrounding
material leading to a so far fruitless search for the responsible ionizing
source. Such a source is clearly required and has already been inferred to
exist via an observed temporal variation of the centre-of-mass velocity of the
A-type stars. Moreover, the ejected nebula is nitrogen-rich which raises
question about the mass-loss process from a likely intermediate-mass
progenitor. We use optical integral-field spectroscopy to study the emission
lines of the inner nebula ring. This has enabled us to perform an empirical
analysis of the optical collisionally excited lines, together with a fully
three-dimensional photoionization modelling. Our empirical results are used to
constrain the photoionization models, which determine the evolutionary stage of
the responsible ionizing source and its likely progenitor. The time-scale for
the evolutionary track of a hydrogen-rich model atmosphere is inconsistent with
the dynamical age obtained for the ring. This suggests that the central star
has undergone a very late thermal pulse. We conclude that the ionizing star
could be hydrogen-deficient and compatible with what is known as a PG 1159-type
star. The evolutionary tracks for the very late thermal pulse models imply a
central star mass of ~ 0.64M, which originated from a ~
3M progenitor. The evolutionary time-scales suggest that the
central star left the asymptotic giant branch about 25,000 years ago, which is
consistent with the nebula's age.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, 10 tables, proof corrections applie
- …