The True Luminosities of Planetary Nebulae in M31's Bulge: Massive Central Stars from an Old Stellar Population
Brian D. Davis, Robin Ciardullo, George H. Jacoby, John. J. Feldmeier,, Briana L. Indahl

TL;DR
This study reveals that the brightest planetary nebulae in M31's bulge have central stars more massive than expected from old stellar populations, challenging current models of stellar evolution.
Contribution
It provides evidence that very luminous planetary nebulae in old populations originate from massive central stars, contradicting traditional single-star evolution assumptions.
Findings
Bright PNe produce >1200 L_sun in [O III] line
Central star luminosities ≥11,000 L_sun imply masses >0.66 M_sun
High-mass PN central stars are common in old stellar populations
Abstract
We measure the Balmer decrements of 23 of the brightest planetary nebulae (PNe) in the inner bulge ( arcmin) of M31 and de-redden the bright end of the region's [O III] planetary nebula luminosity function. We show that the most luminous PNe produce of power in their [O III] line, implying central star luminosities of at least . Even with the most recent accelerated-evolution post-AGB models, such luminosities require central star masses in excess of , and main sequence progenitors of at least . Since M31's bulge has very few intermediate-age stars, we conclude that conventional single-star evolution cannot be responsible for these extremely luminous objects. We also present the circumstellar extinctions for the region's…
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