On the most luminous planetary nebulae of M31
Rebeca Galera-Rosillo, Antonio Mampaso, Romano L.M. Corradi, Jorge, Garc\'ia-Rojas, Bruce Balick, David Jones, Karen B. Kwitter, Laura Magrini,, Eva Villaver

TL;DR
This study uses deep spectra of planetary nebulae in M31 to analyze their chemical abundances and stellar progenitors, providing insights into the origin of the PNLF cutoff and testing stellar evolution models.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed chemical and stellar property analysis of the brightest PNe in M31, constraining progenitor masses and challenging existing nucleosynthesis models.
Findings
Bright PNe have similar stellar properties, indicating a narrow progenitor mass range.
Central star temperatures and luminosities align with post-AGB models for 1.5 solar mass stars.
N/O abundance ratios in some nebulae exceed model predictions.
Abstract
To study the progenitors of PNe at the tip of the Planetary Nebula Luminosity Function (PNLF), we obtained the deepest existing spectra of a sample of PNe in the galaxy M31. Precise chemical abundances allow us to confront the theoretical yields for Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stellar masses and metallicities expected at the bright end of the PNLF. Central star masses of the sampled PNe provide direct information on the controversial origin of the universal cutoff of the PNLF. Using the 10.4m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) optical spectra of nine bright M31 PNe were obtained: four of them at the tip of the PNLF, and the other five some 0.5 magnitudes fainter. A control sample of 21 PNe with previous GTC spectra from literature is also included. Their physical properties and chemical abundances (He, N, O, Ar, Ne and S) are analysed. The central star masses are estimated with Cloudy…
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