Planetary Nebulae with Ultra-Violet Imaging Telescope (UVIT): Far Ultra-violet halo around the Bow Tie nebula (NGC 40)
N. Kameswara Rao, F. Sutaria, J. Murthy, S. Krishna, R. Mohan, A. Ray

TL;DR
This study uses UVIT to map the C IV emission in NGC 40, revealing a large FUV halo likely caused by H2 fluorescence, and demonstrates UVIT's potential for detailed nebular analysis.
Contribution
First UVIT-based C IV mapping of NGC 40, uncovering a large FUV halo and highlighting the interaction of stellar wind with nebular material.
Findings
C IV emission morphology matches diffuse X-ray regions.
Discovery of a large FUV halo likely due to H2 fluorescence.
H2 molecules extend beyond optical and IR halos.
Abstract
Context. NGC 40 is a planetary nebula with diffuse X-ray emission, suggesting an interaction of the high speed wind from WC8 central star (CS) with the nebula. It shows strong Civ 1550 {\AA} emission that cannot be explained by thermal processes alone. We present here the first map of this nebula in C IV emission, using broad band filters on the UVIT. Aims. To map the hot C IV emitting gas and its correspondence with soft X-ray (0.3-8 keV) emitting regions, in order to study the shock interaction with the nebula and the ISM. This also illustrates the potential of UVIT for nebular studies. Methods. Morphological study of images of the nebula obtained at an angular resolution of about 1.3" in four UVIT filter bands that include C IV 1550 {\AA} and C II] 2326 {\AA} lines and UV continuum. Comparisons with X-ray, optical, and IR images from literature. Results. The C II] 2326 {\AA}…
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