The planetary nebula Abell 48 and its [WN] nucleus
David J. Frew, Ivan S. Bojicic, Q.A. Parker, M. Stupar, S. Wachter, K., DePew, A. Danehkar, M.T. Fitzgerald, and D. Douchin

TL;DR
This study confirms that Abell 48 is a planetary nebula with a helium-rich, hydrogen-deficient [WN] nucleus, providing insights into late-stage stellar evolution and challenging existing models due to its unusual nitrogen enrichment.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed multi-wavelength analysis of Abell 48, establishing its nature as a planetary nebula with a [WN] nucleus and discussing implications for stellar evolution models.
Findings
Abell 48 is a planetary nebula, not a massive star ejecta.
The central star has a temperature of 71 kK and is helium-rich with low hydrogen.
The nebula's properties are typical of middle-aged planetary nebulae.
Abstract
We have conducted a detailed multi-wavelength study of the peculiar nebula Abell 48 and its central star. We classify the nucleus as a helium-rich, hydrogen-deficient star of type [WN4-5]. The evidence for either a massive WN or a low-mass [WN] interpretation is critically examined, and we firmly conclude that Abell 48 is a planetary nebula (PN) around an evolved low-mass star, rather than a Population I ejecta nebula. Importantly, the surrounding nebula has a morphology typical of PNe, and is not enriched in nitrogen, and thus not the `peeled atmosphere' of a massive star. We estimate a distance of 1.6 kpc and a reddening, E(B-V) = 1.90 mag, the latter value clearly showing the nebula lies on the near side of the Galactic bar, and cannot be a massive WN star. The ionized mass (~0.3 M_Sun) and electron density (700 cm^-3) are typical of middle-aged PNe. The observed stellar spectrum was…
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