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The shaping effect of collimated fast outflows in the Egg nebula

Abstract

We present high angular resolution observations of the HC3_3N J=5--4 line from the Egg nebula, which is the archetype of protoplanetary nebulae. We find that the HC3_{\rm 3}N emission in the approaching and receding portion of the envelope traces a clumpy hollow shell, similar to that seen in normal carbon rich envelopes. Near the systemic velocity, the hollow shell is fragmented into several large blobs or arcs with missing portions correspond spatially to locations of previously reported high--velocity outlows in the Egg nebula. This provides direct evidence for the disruption of the slowly--expanding envelope ejected during the AGB phase by the collimated fast outflows initiated during the transition to the protoplanetary nebula phase. We also find that the intersection of fast molecular outflows previously suggested as the location of the central post-AGB star is significantly offset from the center of the hollow shell. From modelling the HC3_3N distribution we could reproduce qualitatively the spatial kinematics of the HC3_3N J=5--4 emission using a HC3_3N shell with two pairs of cavities cleared by the collimated high velocity outflows along the polar direction and in the equatorial plane. We infer a relatively high abundance of HC3_3N/H2_2 \sim3x106^{-6} for an estimated mass--loss rate of 3x105^{-5} M_\odot yr1^{-1} in the HC3_3N shell. The high abundance of HC3_3N and the presence of some weaker J=5--4 emission in the vicinity of the central post-AGB star suggest an unusually efficient formation of this molecule in the Egg nebula.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, submitted to the Astrophysical Journa

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    Last time updated on 01/04/2019