Spitzer/infrared spectrograph investigation of MIPSGAL 24 {\mu}m compact bubbles : Low resolution observations
M. Nowak, N. Flagey, A. Noriega-Crespo, N. Billot, S. J. Carey, R., Paladini, S. D. Van Dyk

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer/IRS low resolution spectra to classify 11 MIPSGAL 24 μm compact bubbles, revealing two categories linked to their IR morphologies and central sources, and inferring their stellar origins.
Contribution
It provides the first spectroscopic classification of MIPSGAL bubbles, correlating IR morphology with physical nature and identifying their central stellar sources.
Findings
Dust-rich bubbles have low excitation spectra with dust continuum emission.
Dust-poor bubbles show high excitation gas lines, likely planetary nebulae.
Most unidentified bubbles are expected to be planetary nebulae.
Abstract
We present Spitzer/IRS low resolution observations of 11 compact circumstellar bubbles from the MIPSGAL 24 {\mu}m Galactic Plane Survey. We find that this set of MIPSGAL bubbles (MBs) is divided into two categories, and that this distinction correlates with the morphologies of the MBs in the mid- IR. The four MBs with central sources in the mid-IR exhibit dust-rich, low excitation spectra, and their 24 {\mu}m emission is accounted for by the dust continuum. The seven MBs without central sources in the mid-IR have spectra dominated by high excitation gas lines (e.g., [O IV] 26.0 {\mu}m, [Ne V] 14.3 and 24.3 {\mu}m, [Ne III] 15.5 {\mu}m), and the [O IV] line accounts for 50 to almost 100% of the 24 {\mu}m emission in five of them. In the dust-poor MBs, the [Ne V] and [Ne III] line ratios correspond to high excitation conditions. Based on comparisons with published IRS spectra, we suggest…
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.
