A Spitzer Study of the Mass Loss Histories of Three Bipolar Pre-Planetary Nebulae
Tuan Do (1), Mark Morris (1), Raghvendra Sahai (2), Karl, Stapelfeldt (2) ((1) University of California, Los Angeles, (2) JPL, Caltech)

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer infrared imaging to investigate the extended dust shells around three bipolar pre-planetary nebulae, constraining their mass loss histories and revealing differences in their circumstellar environments.
Contribution
First infrared imaging analysis of these nebulae's extended regions, providing new constraints on their mass loss rates and shell structures, challenging previous ISO observations for some objects.
Findings
No extended emission detected around AFGL 2688 and OH 231.8+4.2 beyond 100 arcseconds.
IRAS 16342-3814 shows potential large dust shell, possibly affected by galactic cirrus.
Derived upper limits for dust mass loss rates at specific distances from the sources.
Abstract
We present the results of far-infrared imaging of extended regions around three bipolar pre-planetary nebulae, AFGL 2688, OH 231.8+4.2, and IRAS 163423814, at 70 and 160 m with the MIPS instrument on the Spitzer Space Telescope. After a careful subtraction of the point spread function of the central star from these images, we place constraints on the existence of extended shells and thus on the mass outflow rates as a function of radial distance from these stars. We find no apparent extended emission in AFGL 2688 and OH 231.8+4.2 beyond 100 arcseconds from the central source. In the case of AFGL 2688, this result is inconsistent with a previous report of two extended dust shells made on the basis of ISO observations. We derive an upper limit of M yr and M yr for the dust mass loss rate of AFGL 2688 and OH 231.8,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
