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A Mid-infrared Imaging Survey of Proto-Planetary Nebula Candidates

Margaret Meixner et al 1999 ApJS 122 221-242   doi: 10.1086/313215  Help

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Margaret Meixner1, Toshiya Ueta1, Aditya Dayal2, Joseph L. Hora3, Giovanni Fazio3, Bruce J. Hrivnak4, Christopher J. Skinner5,8, William F. Hoffmann6 and Lynne K. Deutsch7
1 Department of Astronomy, MC-221, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801
2 IPAC/JPL, Caltech, MS 100-22, 770 South Wilson Avenue, Pasadena, CA 91125
3 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, MS 65, 60 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
4 Department of Physics and Astronomy, Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, IN 46383
5 Space Telescope Science Institute, 3700 San Martin Drive, Baltimore, MD 21218
6 University of Arizona, Steward Observatory, Tucson, AZ 85721
7 Boston University, Department of Astronomy/CAS 519, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215
8 Deceased
E-mail: meixner@astro.uiuc.edu, ueta@astro.uiuc.edu, adayal@ipac.caltech.edu, jhora@cfa.harvard.edu, gfazio@cfa.harvard.edu, bhrivnak@exodus.valpo.edu, whoffmann@as.arizona.edu and deutschl@bu.edu

ABSTRACT. We present the data from a mid-infrared (MIR) imaging survey of 66 proto-planetary nebula candidates using two MIR cameras (MIRAC2 and Berkcam) at the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility and the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope. The goal of this survey is to determine the size, flux, and morphology of the MIR emission regions, which sample the inner regions of the circumstellar dust shells of proto-planetary nebulae. We imaged these proto-planetary nebulae with narrowband filters(Δλ/λ~10%) at wavelengths of notable dust features. With our typical angular resolution of 1'', we resolve 17 sources, find 48 objects unresolved, and do not detect one source. For several sources we checked optical and infrared associations and positions of the sources. In table format, we list the size and flux measurements for all of the detected objects and show figures of all of the resolved sources. The proto-planetary nebula candidate sample includes, in addition to the predominant proto-planetary nebulae, extreme asymptotic giant branch stars, young planetary nebulae, a supergiant, and a luminous blue variable. We find that dust shells that are cooler (T~150 K) and brighter in the infrared are more easily resolved. Eleven of the seventeen resolved sources are extended and fall into one of two types of MIR morphological classes: core/elliptical or toroidal. Core/elliptical structures show unresolved cores with lower surface brightness elliptical nebulae. Toroidal structures show limb-brightened peaks suggesting equatorial density enhancements. We argue that core/ellipticals have denser dust shells than toroidals.

Subject headings: circumstellar matter; infrared: ISM: continuum; ISM: structure; stars: AGB and post-AGB; stars: mass loss

Print publication: Issue 1 (1999 May)
Received 1998 July 27, accepted for publication 1998 December 7

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