The first "water fountain" collimated outflow in a planetary nebula
J.F. Gomez, O. Suarez, Ph. Bendjoya, J.R. Rizzo, L.F. Miranda, J.A., Green, L. Uscanga, E. Garcia-Garcia, E. Lagadec, M.A. Guerrero, G., Ramos-Larios

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the first water fountain in a planetary nebula, revealing a transition in mass-loss processes from steady jets to explosive events as stars evolve.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of a water fountain in a planetary nebula, showing a shift in maser emission characteristics during stellar evolution.
Findings
Water fountain in a planetary nebula confirmed.
Maser emission shows a Hubble-like velocity flow.
Indicates a change from steady jets to explosive mass loss.
Abstract
"Water fountains" (WFs) are evolved objects showing high-velocity, collimated jets traced by water maser emission. Most of them are in the post-Asymptotic Giant Branch and they may represent one of the first manifestations of collimated mass loss in evolved stars. We present water maser, carbon monoxide, and mid-infrared spectroscopic data (obtained with the Australia Telescope Compact Array, Herschel Space Observatory, and the Very Large Telescope, respectively) toward IRAS 15103--5754, a possible planetary nebula (PN) with WF characteristics. Carbon monoxide observations show that IRAS 15103-5754 is an evolved object, while the mid-IR spectrum displays unambiguous [NeII] emission, indicating that photoionization has started and thus, its nature as a PN is confirmed. Water maser spectra show several components spreading over a large velocity range ~75 km/s and tracing a collimated jet.…
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