A comprehensive search for stellar bowshock nebulae in the Milky Way: a catalog of 709 mid-infrared selected candidates
Henry A. Kobulnicky, William T. Chick, Danielle P. Schurhammer, Julian, E. Andrews, Matthew S. Povich, Stephan A. Munari, Grace M. Olivier, Rebecca, L. Sorber, Heather N. Wernke, Daniel A. Dale, Don M. Dixon

TL;DR
This study catalogs 709 mid-infrared nebulae in the Milky Way, identifying them as probable stellar bowshocks, and provides evidence for their origins, including runaway stars and interactions with HII regions.
Contribution
It presents the largest catalog of mid-infrared stellar bowshock candidates and analyzes their properties, origins, and the influence of external environmental factors.
Findings
709 candidate bowshock nebulae identified.
Evidence of high-velocity runaway stars among the candidates.
External influences like HII regions affect some bowshock orientations.
Abstract
We identify 709 arc-shaped mid-infrared nebula in 24 micron Spitzer Space Telescope or 22 micron Wide Field Infrared Explorer surveys of the Galactic Plane as probable dusty interstellar bowshocks powered by early-type stars. About 20% are visible at 8 microns or shorter mid-infrared wavelengths as well. The vast majority (660) have no previous identification in the literature. These extended infrared sources are strongly concentrated near Galactic mid-Plane with an angular scale height of ~0.6 degrees. All host a symmetrically placed star implicated as the source of a stellar wind sweeping up interstellar material. These are candidate "runaway" stars potentially having high velocities in the reference frame of the local medium. Among the 286 objects with measured proper motions, we find an unambiguous excess having velocity vectors aligned with the infrared morphology --- kinematic…
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