SIMBAD references

2017MNRAS.466.1412B - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 466, 1412-1420 (2017/April-1)

An analytical model for the evolution of the coldest component of the Boomerang Nebula.

BOHIGAS J.

Abstract (from CDS):

The most striking feature of the Boomerang Nebula is a large nearly spherical cloud where the temperature is close to 2 K. At its inner and outer boundaries, this cloud is expanding at velocities close to 35 and 180 km s–1. The cloud surrounds an asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star and a smaller bipolar molecular cloud, expanding much more slowly. The ultracold spherical cloud has been and still is expanding into a rarefied medium, since there is no trace of a shock wave. This ultracold cloud is modelled using the analytical solution for a power-driven expansion of a spherically symmetric cloud, followed by an adiabatic expansion phase, both into a vacuum. Assuming that the cloud is at a distance of 1500 pc, the present temperature and velocity profile are reproduced with a model where the cloud has an energy close to 8.5 x 1046 erg per solar mass and was ejected 1000 yr ago. In this model, the power-driven phase lasts for ∼10 yr and half of the energy is injected in less than a year. The general features of this model, are amenable with what is found in other spherical shells surrounding AGB stars, the small amount of mass lost by massive OH/IR stars and evolutionary models indicating that there may be extremely high and abrupt mass-loss phases in AGB stars. The energy and time-scale suggest that the ejection of the cold spherical cloud was an intermediate luminosity transient.

Abstract Copyright: © 2016 The Author Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): hydrodynamics - stars: AGB and post-AGB - circumstellar matter - stars: individual: Boomerang Nebula - planetary nebulae: general - planetary nebulae: general

Simbad objects: 9

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