2003MNRAS.340..417C


Query : 2003MNRAS.340..417C

2003MNRAS.340..417C - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 340, 417-446 (2003/April-1)

Ionized haloes in planetary nebulae: new discoveries, literature compilation and basic statistical properties.

CORRADI R.L.M., SCHOENBERNER D., STEFFEN M. and PERINOTTO M.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present a comprehensive observational study of haloes around planetary nebulae (PNe). Deep Hα+[NII] and/or [OIII] narrow-band images have been obtained for 35 PNe, and faint extended haloes have been newly discovered in the following 10 objects: Cn 1-5, IC 2165, IC 2553, NGC 2792, NGC 2867, NGC 3918, NGC 5979, NGC 6578, PB 4, and possibly IC 1747. New deep images have also been obtained of other known or suspected haloes, including the huge extended emission around NGC 3242 and Sh 2-200. In addition, the literature was searched, and together with the new observations an improved data base containing some 50 PN haloes has been compiled.

The halo sample is illustrated in an image atlas contained in this paper, and the original images are made available for use by the scientific community at http://www.ing. iac.es/∼rcorradi/HALOES/.

The haloes have been classified following the predictions of modern radiation-hydrodynamical simulations that describe the formation and evolution of ionized multiple shells and haloes around PNe. According to the models, the observed haloes have been divided into the following groups: (I) circular or slightly elliptical asymptotic giant branch (AGB) haloes, which contain the signature of the last thermal pulse on the AGB; (II) highly asymmetrical AGB haloes; (III) candidate recombination haloes, i.e. limb-brightened extended shells that are expected to be produced by recombination during the late post-AGB evolution, when the luminosity of the central star drops rapidly by a significant factor; (iv) uncertain cases which deserve further study for a reliable classification; (v) non-detections, i.e. PNe in which no halo is found to a level of ≲10–3 the peak surface brightness of the inner nebulae.

We discuss the properties of the haloes: detection rate, morphology, location of the central stars in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, sizes, surface brightness profiles, and kinematical ages. Among the most notable results, we find that, as predicted by models, ionized AGB haloes are a quite common phenomenon in PNe, having been found in 60 per cent of elliptical PNe for which adequately deep images exist. Another 10 per cent show possible recombination haloes. In addition, using the kinematical ages of the haloes and inner nebulae, we conclude that most of the PNe with observed AGB haloes have left the AGB far from a thermal pulse, at a phase when hydrogen burning is the dominant energy source. We find no significant differences between the AGB haloes of hydrogen-poor and hydrogen-rich central stars.


Abstract Copyright: 2003 RAS

Journal keyword(s): planetary nebulae: general

Simbad objects: 59

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Number of rows : 59
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 40 PN 00 13 01.0170097248 +72 31 19.033338720   11.63 11.46     [WC8] 617 2
2 IC 1747 PN 01 57 35.6899203048 +63 19 18.447328776   15.8 15.4     [WC4] 262 2
3 IC 289 PN 03 10 19.3015329024 +61 19 00.913523412   16.8       ~ 157 1
4 PN HDW 2 PN 03 11 01.321 +62 47 45.06           ~ 30 0
5 IC 2003 PN 03 56 21.9884187048 +33 52 30.759977028   13.11 11.87 13.44   [WC3?] 252 0
6 NGC 1514 PN 04 09 16.9855873632 +30 46 33.470907708   10.01 9.48     sdO+A0/3III 334 2
7 NGC 1535 PN 04 14 15.7689913368 -12 44 21.932484324   12.01 12.82     sdO3: 511 0
8 NGC 2022 PN 05 42 06.1904253312 +09 05 10.585995576   14.9 14.2     [WC] 362 0
9 IC 2165 PN 06 21 42.7847803566 -12 59 14.040997076   12.146 10.782 12.305   ~ 375 0
10 NGC 2392 PN 07 29 10.7671398096 +20 54 42.474888072     9.68     O6f 723 1
11 NGC 2438 PN 07 41 50.5194253896 -14 44 07.470144744           ~ 285 3
12 NGC 2610 PN 08 33 23.4238416720 -16 08 57.796735596   9.02   11.23   ~ 181 0
13 IC 2448 PN 09 07 06.3191779848 -69 56 30.692677668   11.1 11.10     O(H)3III-V 232 0
14 NGC 2792 PN 09 12 26.561 -42 25 38.92     11.8     ~ 177 0
15 PN PB 4 PN 09 15 07.7471768784 -54 52 43.872566736   14.35 13.12 16.35 15.12 wels? 93 0
16 NGC 2867 PN 09 21 25.3832468160 -58 18 40.626683604   12.0 10.30     [WO2] 301 0
17 IC 2553 PN 10 09 20.8615809072 -62 36 48.545222112     10.90     wels? 119 0
18 NGC 3242 PN 10 24 46.1335521792 -18 38 32.296857792   11.83 12.15     ~ 819 1
19 PN My 60 PN 10 31 33.4335093912 -55 20 50.821580400     13.30     ~ 75 0
20 M 97 PN 11 14 47.7122947800 +55 01 08.482832076   15.414 15.777 15.960 16.194 ~ 343 1
21 NGC 3699 PN 11 27 57.8398404036 -59 57 28.454312991   10 13.00     ~ 93 1
22 NGC 3918 PN 11 50 17.7709504944 -57 10 57.017302428   10.0 8.5     ~ 381 0
23 PN K 1-23 PN 12 30 52.5791941224 -44 14 16.106394264   13.1 14.1     ~ 31 0
24 IC 3568 PN 12 33 06.8549162136 +82 33 50.202643608   11.809 10.730 12.651   ~ 399 0
25 IC 972 PN 14 04 25.9204685952 -17 13 40.579932360         16.42 ~ 82 0
26 WRAY 16-151 PN 14 18 43.3392909960 -63 07 10.089170220     14.20     O(H)4Ifc 77 0
27 NGC 5844 PN 15 10 40.60 -64 40 25.0     12.70     ~ 78 0
28 NGC 5882 PN 15 16 49.9562553264 -45 38 58.616280132   11.9 10.9     ~ 274 0
29 NGC 5979 PN 15 47 41.1732637320 -61 13 05.549514276     12.10     wels 100 0
30 IC 4593 PN 16 11 44.5479462840 +12 04 17.031388584   10.91 10.84     O7fp 453 0
31 NGC 6210 PN 16 44 29.5191019368 +23 47 59.421958296   12.3 11.7     Of/[WR] 587 0
32 NGC 6369 PN 17 29 20.4566510904 -23 45 34.771819248   16.6 12.00     [WC4] 317 0
33 PN Tc 1 PN 17 45 35.2879212240 -46 05 23.717122728   11.30 11.49     PCyg 263 0
34 PN Vy 1-2 PN 17 54 22.98 +27 59 58.1           ~ 111 0
35 NGC 6543 PN 17 58 33.4039587288 +66 37 58.750734000   11.09 11.28     [WC] 1170 1
36 NGC 6578 PN 18 16 16.517 -20 27 02.67           [WC4/6] 203 0
37 PN MA 3 PN 18 17 49.4030035776 -06 48 21.475118592     17   15.549 ~ 27 0
38 PN M 2-40 PN 18 21 23.8579139424 -06 01 55.766823672     15.8     ~ 63 0
39 NGC 6629 PN 18 25 42.4541775576 -23 12 10.551587436   11.90 9.9     [WC5/6] 265 0
40 PN M 1-46 PN 18 27 56.3175434256 -15 32 54.434037264     12.83     O(H)7I(fc) 125 0
41 PN Cn 1-5 PN 18 29 11.6500996872 -31 29 59.135208396   15.5 15.2 13.34   [WC5/6] 150 0
42 M 57 PN 18 53 35.0967659112 +33 01 44.883287544   15.405 15.769 15.901 16.062 DA(O?) 831 2
43 NGC 6751 PN 19 05 55.5383775432 -05 59 32.288861544   15.78 15.48     [WC4] 328 0
44 NGC 6781 PN 19 18 28.085 +06 32 19.29     11.8     ~ 261 0
45 IRAS 19170+1706 PN 19 19 18.7059814104 +17 11 48.877947312   16.390 14.958 14.753   O(H)9I 25 0
46 NGC 6803 PN 19 31 16.4826019750 +10 03 21.620200381   13.034 11.616 13.242   ~ 248 0
47 HD 184738 PN 19 34 45.2337620448 +30 30 58.950651240   10.41 10.44     [WC9] 952 0
48 NGC 6826 PN 19 44 48.1500225888 +50 31 30.249034932   9.779 9.359 10.775   O3f(H) 719 0
49 M 27 PN 19 59 36.3631850088 +22 43 16.312059552   13.749 14.089 14.247 14.405 DAO.6 588 0
50 NGC 6852 PN 20 00 39.2100674640 +01 43 40.921293540   17.70       PG1159 68 1
51 NGC 6884 PN 20 10 23.6424784416 +46 27 39.631794408   11.9 10.9     ~ 314 1
52 NGC 6891 PN 20 15 08.8435405584 +12 42 15.584146740   12.11 12.51     O3Ib(f*) 395 0
53 NGC 6905 PN 20 22 22.9919225472 +20 06 16.285052088   16.3 14.5     [WC3] 346 0
54 NGC 7009 PN 21 04 10.8155187648 -11 21 48.580157556   12.48 12.07     ~ 996 1
55 NGC 7293 PN 22 29 38.5454047152 -20 50 13.747242408 11.894 13.158 13.524 13.689 13.898 DAO.5 943 0
56 NGC 7354 PN 22 40 19.8733664208 +61 17 08.746685772           ~ 277 1
57 NGC 7392 Sy2 22 51 48.7580046720 -20 36 29.030432256   12.61 11.85     ~ 101 0
58 PN Vy 2-3 PN 23 22 57.9043238616 +46 53 58.073396856           O(H)3-4I 87 0
59 NGC 7662 PN 23 25 53.8318792825 +42 32 05.835828380       11.427   ~ 926 0

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