Circumstellar Structure around Evolved Stars in the Cygnus-X Star Formation Region
Kathleen E. Kraemer, Joseph L. Hora, Michael P. Egan, Joseph Adams,, Lori E. Allen, Sylvain Bontemps, Sean J. Carey, Giovanni G. Fazio, Robert, Gutermuth, Eric Keto, Xavier P. Koenig, S. Thomas Megeath, Donald R. Mizuno,, Frederique Motte, Stephan D. Price, Nicola Schneider

TL;DR
This study reports new mid-infrared observations of circumstellar structures around evolved stars in Cygnus-X, revealing shells, rings, and possible outflows, with detailed modeling of dust properties and mass-loss episodes.
Contribution
First detailed infrared imaging and modeling of circumstellar shells around evolved stars in Cygnus-X, including discovery of outer rings and constraints on dust composition.
Findings
Detection of bipolar nebula around BD+43 3710.
Discovery of an outer ring around G79.29+0.46.
Shells composed of amorphous carbon and PAHs.
Abstract
We present observations of newly discovered 24 micron circumstellar structures detected with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS) around three evolved stars in the Cygnus-X star forming region. One of the objects, BD+43 3710, has a bipolar nebula, possibly due to an outflow or a torus of material. A second, HBHA 4202-22, a Wolf-Rayet candidate, shows a circular shell of 24 micron emission suggestive of either a limb-brightened shell or disk seen face-on. No diffuse emission was detected around either of these two objects in the Spitzer 3.6-8 micron Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) bands. The third object is the luminous blue variable candidate G79.29+0.46. We resolved the previously known inner ring in all four IRAC bands. The 24 micron emission from the inner ring extends ~1.2 arcmin beyond the shorter wavelength emission, well beyond what can be attributed to the difference…
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