Planetary nebulae and their mimics: the MASH-MEN Project
Rozenn Boissay, Quentin A. Parker, David J. Frew, Ivan Bojicic

TL;DR
The MASH-MEN project catalogs and analyzes objects mimicking planetary nebulae, enhancing the purity of PN catalogs and providing detailed multi-wavelength data on these imposters to improve classification accuracy.
Contribution
This work introduces a comprehensive catalog of non-PN emission nebulae identified from the MASH survey, aiding in distinguishing true planetary nebulae from mimics.
Findings
Identification of various astrophysical objects mimicking PNe.
Development of a high-purity PN catalog with follow-up spectroscopy.
Ongoing analysis of miscellaneous emission nebulae objects.
Abstract
The total number of true, likely and possible planetary nebulae (PN) now known in the Milky Way is about 3000, approximately twice the number known a decade ago. The new discoveries are a legacy of the recent availability of wide-field, narrowband imaging surveys, primarily in the light of H-alpha. The two most important are the AAO/UKST SuperCOSMOS H-alpha survey - SHS and the Isaac Newton photometric H-alpha survey - IPHAS, which are responsible for most of the new discoveries. A serious problem with previous PN catalogues is that several different kinds of astrophysical objects are able to mimic PN in some of their observed properties leading to significant contamination. These objects include H II regions and Stromgren zones around young O/B stars, reflection nebulae, Wolf-Rayet ejecta, supernova remnants, Herbig-Haro objects, young stellar objects, B[e] stars, symbiotic stars and…
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