Formation and X-ray Emission from Hot Bubbles in Planetary Nebulae. II. Hot bubble X-ray emission
J.A. Toal\'a, S.J. Arthur

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to analyze X-ray emission from hot bubbles in planetary nebulae, revealing how thermal conduction influences luminosity and spectral properties over time.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of X-ray emission in PNe hot bubbles, including effects of thermal conduction and instabilities.
Findings
Models with conduction are more luminous by an order of magnitude.
Early X-ray emission is dominated by hot stellar wind; later by nebular gas.
A minimum of 200 counts is needed for reliable spectral analysis.
Abstract
We present a study of the X-ray emission from numerical simulations of hot bubbles in planetary nebulae (PNe). High-resolution, two-dimensional, radiation-hydrodynamical simulations of the formation and evolution of hot bubbles in PNe, with and without thermal conduction, are used to calculate the X-ray emission and study its time-dependence and relationship to the changing stellar parameters. Instabilities in the wind-wind interaction zone produce clumps and filaments in the swept-up shell of nebular material. Turbulent mixing and thermal conduction at the corrugated interface can produce quantities of intermediate temperature and density gas between the hot, shocked wind bubble and the swept-up photoionized nebular material, which can emit in soft, diffuse X-rays. We use the CHIANTI software to compute synthetic spectra for the models and calculate their luminosities. We find that…
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