On the polarisation of the Red Rectangle optical emission bands
N.L.J. Cox, B.H. Foing, J. Cami, P.J. Sarre

TL;DR
This study investigates the polarisation of optical emission bands in the Red Rectangle nebula to understand their molecular origin, finding no significant polarisation signals and suggesting symmetric molecular carriers if luminescence is involved.
Contribution
The paper provides high-resolution spectropolarimetric data of the Red Rectangle's emission bands, setting upper limits on their polarisation and implications for molecular symmetry.
Findings
No unambiguous polarisation detected in the emission bands.
Upper limit of 0.02% line polarisation established.
Possible instrumental artifact at 0.05% polarisation for one feature.
Abstract
The origin of the narrow optical emission bands seen toward the Red Rectangle is not yet understood. In this paper we investigate further the proposal that these are due to luminescence of large carbonaceous molecules. Polarised signals of several percent could be expected from certain asymmetric molecular rotators. The ESPaDOnS echelle spectrograph mounted at the CFHT was used to obtain high-resolution optical spectropolarimetric data of the Red Rectangle nebular emission. The RRBs at 5800, 5850, and 6615 Angstrom are detected in spectra of the nebular emission 7" and 13" North-East from the central star. The 5826 and 6635 Angstrom RRB are detected only at the position nearest to the central star. For both positions the Stokes Q and U spectra show no unambiguous polarisation signal in any of the RRBs. We derive an upper limit of 0.02% line polarisation for these RRBs. A tentative…
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