AKARI Mission Program: Excavating Mass Loss History in Extended Dust Shells of Evolved Stars (MLHES) I. Far-IR Photometry
Toshiya Ueta, Andrew J. Torres, Hideyuki Izumiura, Issei Yamamura,, Satoshi Takita, Rachael L. Tomasino

TL;DR
This study presents a comprehensive far-IR imaging survey of 144 evolved stars' circumstellar dust shells using AKARI, revealing dust distribution, extension, and potential links to stellar evolution stages.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive dataset of far-IR surface brightness distributions of evolved stars' dust shells, improving understanding of their mass loss history and dust properties.
Findings
Far-IR emission detected in nearly all targets.
Majority of sources show extended dust shells.
Resolved previously unresolved nearby objects.
Abstract
We performed a far-IR imaging survey of the circumstellar dust shells of 144 evolved stars as a mission programme of the AKARI infrared astronomical satellite using the Far-Infrared Surveyor (FIS) instrument. With this survey, we deliver far-IR surface brightness distributions of roughly 10' x 40' or 10' x 20' areas of the sky around the target evolved stars in the four FIS bands at 65, 90, 140, and 160 microns. Our objectives are to characterize the far-IR surface brightness distributions of the cold dust component in the circumstellar dust shells, from which we derive the amount of cold dust grains as low as 20 K and empirically establish the history of the early mass loss history. In this first installment of the series, we introduce the project and its aims, describe the observations, data reduction, and surface brightness correction process, and present the entire data set along…
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