Detection of the Central Star of the Planetary Nebula NGC 6302
C. Szyszka (1,2), J. R. Walsh (3), Albert A. Zijlstra (2), Y. G., Tsamis (4,5) ((1) ESO, (2) JBCA, University of Manchester,(3) ST-ECF,(4), Instituto de Astrofis\'ica de Andaluc\'ioa (CSIC),(5) The Open University)

TL;DR
This paper reports the first direct imaging of the central star of planetary nebula NGC 6302 using HST, providing measurements of its properties and evolutionary status, and predicting rapid fading based on stellar models.
Contribution
It presents the first direct detection and measurement of the central star of NGC 6302, including its position, magnitude, and evolutionary status, using HST imaging.
Findings
Central star directly detected at the nebula center.
Star's properties suggest a mass of about 0.64 solar masses.
Star is rapidly evolving and fading at nearly 1% per year.
Abstract
NGC 6302 is one of the highest ionization planetary nebulae known and shows emission from species with ionization potential >300eV. The temperature of the central star must be >200,000K to photoionize the nebula, and has been suggested to be up to ~ 400,000K. On account of the dense dust and molecular disc, the central star has not convincingly been directly imaged until now. NGC 6302 was imaged in six narrow band filters by Wide Field Camera 3 on HST as part of the Servicing Mission 4 Early Release Observations. The central star is directly detected for the first time, and is situated at the nebula centre on the foreground side of the tilted equatorial disc. The magnitudes of the central star have been reliably measured in two filters(F469N and F673N). Assuming a hot black body, the reddening has been measured from the (4688-6766\AA) colour and a value of c=3.1, A_v=6.6 mag determined.…
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