The expansion proper motions of the planetary nebula NGC 6302 from Hubble Space Telescope imaging

C. Szyszka, A. A. Zijlstra, J. R. Walsh

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Planetary nebulae expand on time-scales of 103- 104yr. For nearby objects, their expansion can be detected within years to decades. The pattern of expansion probes the internal velocity field and provides clues to the nebula ejection mechanism. In the case of non-symmetric nebulae, and bipolar nebulae in particular, it can also provide information on the development of the morphology. We have measured the expansion proper motions in NGC6302 from two epochs ofHubble Space Telescope(HST) imaging, separated by 9.43yr. This is used to determine the expansion age and the structure of the velocity field. We useHSTimages in the [Nii] 6583Å filter fromHSTWide Field Planetary Camera 2 and Wide Field Camera 3. The proper motions were obtained for a set of 200 individual tiles within 90arcsec of the central star. The velocity field shows a characteristic linear increase of velocity with radial distance (a so-called Hubble flow). It agrees well with a previous determination by Meaburn et al., made in a lobe further from the star, which was based on a much longer time-span, but ground-based imaging. The pattern of proper motion vectors is mostly radial and the origin is close to the position of the central star directly detected by Szyszka et al. The results show that the lobes of NGC 6302 were ejected during a brief event 2250 ± 35yr ago. In the inner regions there is evidence for a subsequent acceleration of the gas by an additional 9.2kms-1, possibly related to the onset of ionization. The dense and massive molecular torus was ejected over 5000yr, ending about 2900yr ago. The lobes were ejected after a short interlude (the 'jet lag') of ~600yr during a brief event. The torus and lobes originate from separate mass-loss events with different physical processes. The delay between the cessation of equatorial mass loss and the ejection of the lobes provides an important constraint for explaining the final mass-loss stages of the progenitor stellar system. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)715-726
    Number of pages11
    JournalMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
    Volume416
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Sept 2011

    Keywords

    • Planetary nebulae: general
    • Planetary nebulae: individual: NGC6302
    • Stars: AGB and post-AGB
    • Stars: winds, outflows

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