From the ashes: JVLA observations of water fountain nebula candidates show the rebirth of IRAS 18455+0448
W.H.T. Vlemmings, N. Amiri, H.J. van Langevelde, D. Tafoya

TL;DR
This study uses JVLA observations to identify and analyze water fountain nebula candidates, revealing IRAS 18455+0448 as a new water fountain with bipolar outflows and providing insights into early bipolar planetary nebula formation.
Contribution
The paper reports the discovery of IRAS 18455+0448 as a water fountain nebula and presents detailed JVLA observations of its bipolar outflows, expanding understanding of this stellar evolution stage.
Findings
IRAS 18455+0448 exhibits bipolar H2O maser outflows.
The source's kinematic age is approximately 70 years.
IRAS 18455+0448 has a surprisingly low mass compared to other water fountains.
Abstract
[abridged] The class of water fountain nebulae is thought to represent the stage of the earliest onset of collimated bipolar outflows during the post-Asymptotic Giant Branch phase. They thus play a crucial role in the study of the formation of bipolar Planetary Nebulae (PNe). To date, 14 water fountain nebulae have been identified. The identification of more sources in this unique stage of stellar evolution will enable us to study the origin of bipolar PNe morphologies in more detail. We present the results of seven sources observed with the JVLA that were identified as water fountain candidates in an Effelsberg 100m telescope survey of 74 AGB and early post-AGB stars. We find that our sample of water fountain candidates displays strong variability in their 22 GHz H2O maser spectra. The JVLA observations show an extended bipolar H2O maser outflow for one source, the OH/IR star IRAS…
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.
