Low-ionization structures in planetary nebulae - I: physical, kinematic and excitation properties
Stavros Akras, Denise R. Gon\c{c}alves

TL;DR
This study investigates low-ionization structures in planetary nebulae, revealing that shocks primarily excite these features, with detailed diagnostics distinguishing shock and photo-ionization contributions, enhancing understanding of nebular formation and evolution.
Contribution
The paper provides new spectroscopic evidence that shocks dominate the excitation of low-ionization structures in planetary nebulae and introduces diagnostic diagrams to differentiate excitation mechanisms.
Findings
LISs have lower electron density than surrounding nebulae.
Shock excitation is the main mechanism for LISs, while other components are mainly photo-ionized.
New diagnostic diagrams effectively distinguish between shock and photo-ionization contributions.
Abstract
Though the small-scale, low-ionization knots, filaments and jets (LISs) of planetary nebulae (PNe) are known for ~30yr, some of their observational properties are not well established. In consequence our ability to include them in the wider context of the formation and evolution of PNe is directly affected. Why most structures have lower densities than the PN shells hosting them? Is their intense emission in low-ionization lines the key to their main excitation mechanism? Therefore, if considered altogether, can LISs line ratios, chemical abundances and kinematics enlighten the interplay between the different excitation and formation processes? Here we present a spectroscopic analysis of five PNe that possess LISs confirming that all nebular components have comparable electron temperatures, whereas the electron density is systematically lower in LISs than in the surrounding nebula.…
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