The Double-Degenerate Nucleus of the Planetary Nebula TS 01. A Close Binary Evolution Showcase
Gagik Tovmassian, Lev Yungelson, Thomas Rauch, Valery Suleimanov, Ralf, Napiwotzki, Grazyna Stasinska, John Tomsick, Jorn Wilms, Christophe Morisset,, Miriam Pena, Michael G. Richer

TL;DR
This paper investigates the double-degenerate core of the planetary nebula TS 01, revealing a binary system with potential to become a Type Ia supernova, through multi-wavelength observations and detailed modeling.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of the binary components in TS 01, including their physical parameters and evolutionary status, highlighting its significance as a supernova progenitor candidate.
Findings
Detected the invisible binary component with XMM-Newton
Determined the physical parameters of both stars
Identified TS 01 as a potential Type Ia supernova progenitor
Abstract
We present a detailed investigation of SBS1150+599A, a close binary star hosted by the planetary nebula PN G135.9+55.9 (TS01, Stasinska et al, 2009). The nebula, located in the Galactic halo, is the most oxygen-poor one known to date and is the only one known to harbor a double degenerate core. We present XMM-Newton observations of this object, which allowed the detection of the previously invisible component of the binary core, whose existence was inferred so far only from radial velocity and photometric variations. The parameters of the binary system were deduced from a wealth of information via three independent routes using the spectral energy distribution (from the infrared to X-rays), the light and radial velocity curves, and a detailed model atmosphere fitting of the stellar absorption features of the optical/UV component. We find that the cool component must have a mass of…
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