Two's company, three's a crowd: SALT reveals the likely triple nature of the nucleus of the extreme abundance discrepancy factor planetary nebula Sp 3
B. Miszalski, R. Manick, T. Rauch, K. I{\l}kiewicz, H. Van Winckel and, J. Miko{\l}ajewska

TL;DR
This paper presents evidence that the planetary nebula Sp 3 likely has a triple nucleus, with a binary central star and a visual companion, which may influence its complex morphology and unusual chemical abundance features.
Contribution
It reports the discovery of a likely triple nucleus in Sp 3, combining spectroscopic and astrometric data, and discusses its implications for nebular morphology and chemical peculiarities.
Findings
Discovery of a 4.81-day binary in Sp 3 with a visual companion.
Support for a physical association indicating a triple nucleus.
Unusual oxygen abundance discrepancy factor (adf) of 24.6 in Sp 3.
Abstract
The substantial number of binary central stars of planetary nebulae (CSPNe) now known (50) has revealed a strong connection between binarity and some morphological features including jets and low-ionisation structures. However, some features and asymmetries might be too complex or subtle to ascribe to binary interactions alone. A tertiary component, i.e. a triple nucleus, could be the missing ingredient required to produce these features. The only proven triple, NGC 246, is insufficient to investigate the shaping role of triple nuclei, but one straight-forward way to identify more triples is to search for binaries in nuclei with known visual companions. Here we report on the SALT HRS discovery of a 4.81 d orbital period in the CSPN of Sp 3 which has a visual companion 0.31" away. The spectroscopic distance of the visual companion agrees with distance estimates to the nebula, the…
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