Herschel imaging of the dust in the Helix Nebula (NGC 7293)
G.C. Van de Steene, P. A. M. van Hoof, K. M. Exter, M. J. Barlow, J., Cernicharo, M. Etxaluze, W. K. Gear, J. R. Goicoechea, H. L. Gomez, M. A. T., Groenewegen, P. C. Hargrave, R. J. Ivison, S. J. Leeks, T. L. Lim, M., Matsuura, G. Olofsson, E. T. Polehampton, B. M. Swinyard

TL;DR
This paper presents Herschel imaging of the Helix Nebula, revealing the dust distribution, composition, and temperature, and compares it with ionized and molecular components to understand its structure.
Contribution
First detailed Herschel-based analysis of dust in the Helix Nebula, including spectral energy distribution, dust mass, and temperature mapping, highlighting amorphous carbon dominance.
Findings
Dust is clumpy and mainly in the barrel wall.
Dust temperature ranges from 22 to 42 K.
Total dust mass is approximately 0.0035 solar masses.
Abstract
In our series of papers presenting the Herschel imaging of evolved planetary nebulae, we present images of the dust distribution in the Helix nebula (NGC 7293). Images at 70, 160, 250, 350, and 500 micron were obtained with the PACS and SPIRE instruments on board the Herschel satellite. The broadband maps show the dust distribution over the main Helix nebula to be clumpy and predominantly present in the barrel wall. We determined the spectral energy distribution of the main nebula in a consistent way using Herschel, IRAS, and Planck flux values. The emissivity index of 0.99 +/- 0.09, in combination with the carbon rich molecular chemistry of the nebula, indicates that the dust consists mainly of amorphous carbon. The dust excess emission from the central star disk is detected at 70 micron and the flux measurement agree with previous measurement. We present the temperature and dust…
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