Discovery of planetary nebulae using predictive mid-infrared diagnostics
Quentin A. Parker, Martin Cohen, Milorad Stupar, David J. Frew, Anne, J. Green, Ivan Bojicic, Lizette Guzman-Ramirez, Laurence Sabin, Frederic, Vogt

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new mid-infrared technique for identifying obscured planetary nebulae in Galactic surveys, demonstrating its effectiveness through follow-up spectroscopy and highlighting the importance of image data validation.
Contribution
It presents a novel MIR-based selection method for planetary nebulae that improves detection of obscured objects and emphasizes the need for image data validation to reduce false positives.
Findings
MIR selection can identify previously missed PNe.
Visual image validation reduces false detections.
Follow-up spectroscopy confirms new PNe candidates.
Abstract
We demonstrate a newly developed mid-infrared planetary nebula (PN) selection technique. It is designed to enable efficient searches for obscured, previously unknown, PN candidates present in the photometric source catalogues of Galactic plane MIR sky surveys. Such selection is now possible via new, sensitive, high-to-medium resolution, MIR satellite surveys such as those from the Spitzer Space Telescope and the all-sky Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) satellite missions. MIR selection is based on how different colour-colour planes isolate zones (sometimes overlapping) that are predominately occupied by different astrophysical object types. These techniques depend on the reliability of the available MIR source photometry. In this pilot study we concentrate on MIR point source detections and show that it is dangerous to take the MIR GLIMPSE (Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane…
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