Pinpointing the Position of the Post-AGB Star at the Core of RAFGL 2688 using Polarimetric Imaging with NICMOS
We have used infrared polarimetric imaging with NICMOS to determine precisely the position of the star that illuminates (and presumably generated) the bipolar, pre-planetary reflection nebula RAFGL 2688 (the Egg Nebula). The polarimetric data pinpoint the illuminating star, which is not detected dir...
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Zusammenfassung: | We have used infrared polarimetric imaging with NICMOS to determine precisely
the position of the star that illuminates (and presumably generated) the
bipolar, pre-planetary reflection nebula RAFGL 2688 (the Egg Nebula). The
polarimetric data pinpoint the illuminating star, which is not detected
directly at wavelengths less than or equal to 2 microns, at a position well
within the dark lane that bisects the nebula, 0.55" (about 550 AU) southwest of
the infrared peak which was previously detected at the southern tip of the
northern polar lobe. The inferred position of the central star corresponds to
the geometric center of the tips of the four principle lobes of near-infrared
H2 emission; identifying the central star at this position also reveals the
strong point symmetric structure of the nebula, as seen both in the intensity
and polarization structure of the polar lobes. The polarimetric and imaging
data indicate that the infrared peak directly detected in the NICMOS images is
a self-luminous source and, therefore, is most likely a distant binary
companion to the illuminating star. Although present theory predicts that
bipolar structure in pre-planetary and planetary nebulae is a consequence of
binary star evolution, the separation between the components of the RAFGL 2688
binary system, as deduced from these observations, is much too large for the
presence of the infrared companion to have influenced the structure of the
RAFGL 2688 nebula. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0002079 |