English

X-rays from Planetary Nebulae

Astrophysics 2007-05-23 v1

Abstract

Two sources of X-ray emission are expected from planetary nebulae: the hot central stars with Teff>105T_{eff} > 10^5 K, and shocked fast stellar winds at temperatures of 106107^6 - 10^7 K. The stellar emission and nebular emission differ in spatial distribution and spectral properties. Observations of X-ray emission from PNe may provide essential information on formation mechanisms and physical conditions of PNe. X-ray emission from PNe has been detected by Einstein and EXOSAT, but significant advances are made only after ROSAT became available. The ROSAT archive contains useful observations of ~80 PNe, of which 13 are detected. Three types of X-ray spectra are seen. Only three PNe are marginally resolved by the ROSAT instruments. In the near future, Chandra will provide X-ray observations with much higher angular and spectral resolution, and help us understand the central stars as well as the hot interiors of PNe.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.astro-ph/9909106,
  title  = {X-rays from Planetary Nebulae},
  author = {You-Hua Chu and Martin A. Guerrero and Robert A. Gruendl},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:astro-ph/9909106},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

4 pages, proceedings of the workshop "Asymmetrical Planetary Nebulae II: From Origins to Microstructures"