The Expansion Proper Motions of the Planetary Nebula NGC 6302 from HST imaging
C. Szyszka, A. A. Zijlstra, J. R. Walsh

TL;DR
This study measures the proper motions of NGC 6302's nebula using HST images over 9.43 years, revealing the nebula's expansion history, velocity field, and separate mass-loss events that shaped its current structure.
Contribution
First detailed proper motion analysis of NGC 6302 using multi-epoch HST data, revealing the nebula's expansion age, velocity field, and distinct ejection events.
Findings
Lobes ejected approximately 2250 years ago.
Inner gas shows acceleration possibly due to ionization.
Molecular torus ejected over 5000 years ago.
Abstract
Planetary nebulae expand on time scales of 10^3-10^4 yr. For nearby objects, their expansion can be detected within years to decades. The pattern of expansion probes the internal velocity field and provides clues to the nebula ejection mechanism. In the case of non-symmetric nebulae, and bipolar nebulae in particular, it can also provide information on the development of the morphology. We have measured the expansion proper motions in NGC 6302 from two epochs of HST imaging, separated by 9.43 years. This is used to determine the expansion age and the structure of the velocity field. We use HST images in the [N II] 6583{\AA} filter from HST WF/PC2 and WFC3. The proper motions were obtained for a set of 200 individual tiles within 90" of the central star. The velocity field shows a characteristic linear increase of velocity with radial distance (a so-called Hubble flow). It agrees well…
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