Rebirth of X-ray Emission from the Born-Again Planetary Nebula A 30
M. A. Guerrero, N. Ruiz, W.-R. Hamann, Y.-H. Chu, H. Todt, D., Schoenberner, L. Oskinova, R. A. Gruendl, M. Steffen, W. P. Blair, and J. A., Toal\'a

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of X-ray emissions in the born-again planetary nebula A30, revealing that diffuse X-rays are generated by shock interactions between stellar winds and hydrogen-poor ejecta, with complex central star emission mechanisms.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed analysis of X-ray emission sources in A30, combining high-resolution imaging and spectral data to elucidate wind-ejecta interactions and the nature of the central star's X-ray emission.
Findings
Diffuse X-ray emission is linked to wind-ejecta interactions.
The central star's X-ray emission origin remains uncertain.
Shock-heated plasma explains the diffuse X-ray component.
Abstract
The planetary nebula (PN) A30 is believed to have undergone a very late thermal pulse resulting in the ejection of knots of hydrogen-poor material. Using HST images we have detected the angular expansion of these knots and derived an age of 850+280-150 yr. To investigate the spectral and spatial properties of the soft X-ray emission detected by ROSAT, we have obtained Chandra and XMM-Newton observations of A30. The X-ray emission from A30 can be separated into two components: a point-source at the central star and diffuse emission associated with the hydrogen-poor knots and the cloverleaf structure inside the nebular shell. To help us assess the role of the current stellar wind in powering this X-ray emission, we have determined the stellar parameters of the central star of A 30 using a non-LTE model fit to its optical and UV spectrum. The spatial distribution and spectral properties of…
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