Planetary Nebulae in the Magellanic Clouds and Local Group Galaxies
Warren A. Reid

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in the study of planetary nebulae (PNe) in the Magellanic Clouds and Local Group galaxies, highlighting new discoveries, survey completeness, and the potential for future research.
Contribution
It summarizes recent observational progress, survey completeness, and the lack of PN searches in many Local Group galaxies, providing estimates of their PN populations.
Findings
Increased number of PNe discovered in the LMC.
Surveys approaching completeness at ~80% in the LMC.
Most Local Group galaxies lack dedicated PN searches.
Abstract
The Magellanic Clouds are close enough to the Milky Way to provide an excellent environment in which to study extragalactic PNe. Most of these PNe are bright enough to be spectroscopically observed and spatially resolved. With the latest high resolution detectors on today's large telescopes it is even possible to directly observe a large number of central stars. Magellanic Cloud (MC) PNe provide several astrophysical benefits including low overall extinction and a good sample size covering a large range of dynamic evolutionary timescales while the known distances provide a direct estimation of luminosity and physical dimensions. Multi-wavelength surveys are revealing intriguing differences between MC and Galactic PNe. Over the past 5 years there has been a substantial increase in the number of PNe discovered in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) in particular. Deep surveys have allowed…
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