English

Ongoing surveys for close binary central stars and wider implications

Solar and Stellar Astrophysics 2015-05-30 v1

Abstract

Binary central stars have long been invoked to explain the vexing shapes of planetary nebulae (PNe) despite there being scant direct evidence to support this hypothesis. Modern large-scale surveys and improved observing strategies have allowed us to significantly boost the number of known close binary central stars and estimate at least 20% of PNe have close binary nuclei that passed through a common-envelope (CE) phase. The larger sample of post-CE nebulae appears to have a high proportion of bipolar nebulae, low-ionisation structures (especially in SN1987A-like rings) and polar outflows or jets. These trends are guiding our target selection in ongoing multi-epoch spectroscopic and photometric surveys for new binaries. Multiple new discoveries are being uncovered that further strengthen the connection between post-CE trends and close binaries. These ongoing surveys also have wider implications for understanding CE evolution, low-ionisation structure and jet formation, spectral classification of central stars, asymptotic giant branch (AGB) nucleosynthesis and dust obscuration events in PNe.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1110.1831,
  title  = {Ongoing surveys for close binary central stars and wider implications},
  author = {Brent Miszalski},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1110.1831},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

To appear in IAU Symposium 283: Planetary Nebulae, an Eye to the Future. 4 pages, 1 figure

R2 v1 2026-06-21T19:17:28.439Z