The Chandra Planetary Nebula Survey (ChanPlaNS). II. X-ray Emission from Compact Planetary Nebulae
M. Freeman (1), R. Montez Jr. (2), J. H. Kastner (1), B. Balick (3),, D. J. Frew (4), D. Jones (17,18), B. Miszalski (5,6), R. Sahai (7), E., Blackman (8), Y.-H. Chu (9), O. De Marco (4), A. Frank (8), M. A. Guerrero, (10), J. A. Lopez (11), A. Zijlstra (12), V. Bujarrabal (14)

TL;DR
This study uses Chandra X-ray observations to analyze the frequency and characteristics of X-ray emission in compact planetary nebulae, revealing correlations with age, structure, and central star type.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive X-ray survey of nearby planetary nebulae, identifying new X-ray emitting nebulae and clarifying the conditions associated with X-ray emission.
Findings
Diffuse X-ray emission is linked to young, compact PNe with closed structures.
Diffuse X-ray emission is often associated with [WR]-type central stars.
Detection rates of X-ray emission are approximately 27% for diffuse and 36% for point sources.
Abstract
We present results from the most recent set of observations obtained as part of the Chandra X-ray observatory Planetary Nebula Survey (ChanPlaNS), the first comprehensive X-ray survey of planetary nebulae (PNe) in the solar neighborhood (i.e., within ~1.5 kpc of the Sun). The survey is designed to place constraints on the frequency of appearance and range of X-ray spectral characteristics of X-ray-emitting PN central stars and the evolutionary timescales of wind-shock-heated bubbles within PNe. ChanPlaNS began with a combined Cycle 12 and archive Chandra survey of 35 PNe. ChanPlaNS continued via a Chandra Cycle 14 Large Program which targeted all (24) remaining known compact (R_neb <~ 0.4 pc), young PNe that lie within ~1.5 kpc. Results from these Cycle 14 observations include first-time X-ray detections of hot bubbles within NGC 1501, 3918, 6153, and 6369, and point sources in HbDs 1,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
