A Herschel study of NGC 650
P.A.M. van Hoof, G.C. Van de Steene, K.M. Exter, M.J. Barlow, T. Ueta,, M.A.T. Groenewegen, W.K. Gear, H.L. Gomez, P.C. Hargrave, R.J. Ivison, S.J., Leeks, T.L. Lim, G. Olofsson, E.T. Polehampton, B.M. Swinyard, H. Van, Winckel, C. Waelkens, R. Wesson

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel imaging and radiative transfer modeling to analyze the dust and stellar properties of planetary nebula NGC 650, revealing a hotter central star, large dust grains, and complex heating mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed dust temperature map and a refined photoionization model for NGC 650, including new stellar parameters and dust grain size insights.
Findings
The central star has T_eff = 208 kK, L = 261 L_sun, much higher than previous estimates.
The nebula is confirmed to be carbon-rich with C/O ratio of 2.1.
Dust grains are large, around 0.15 micron, likely inherited from the AGB phase.
Abstract
As part of the Herschel Guaranteed Time Key Project MESS (Mass loss of Evolved StarS) we have imaged a sample of planetary nebulae. In this paper we present the PACS and SPIRE images of the classical bipolar planetary nebula NGC 650. We used these images to derive a temperature map of the dust. We also constructed a photoionization and dust radiative transfer model using the spectral synthesis code Cloudy. To constrain this model, we used the PACS and SPIRE fluxes and combined these with hitherto unpublished IUE and Spitzer IRS spectra as well as various other data from the literature. The temperature map combined with the photoionization model were used to study various aspects of the central star, the nebula, and in particular the dust grains in the nebula. The central star parameters are determined to be T_eff = 208 kK and L = 261 L_sol assuming a distance of 1200 pc. The stellar…
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