3.8 Article

Shaping Planetary Nebulae with Jets and the Grazing Envelope Evolution

Journal

GALAXIES
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/galaxies8010026

Keywords

planetary nebulae; general; ISM; jets and outflows; stars; AGB and post-AGB; binaries; general; stars; mass-loss; stars; winds; stars; outflows

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation [420/16]
  2. Asher Space Research Fund

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I argue that the high percentage of planetary nebulae (PNe) that are shaped by jets show that main sequence stars in binary systems can accrete mass at a high rate from an accretion disk and launch jets. Not only does this allow jets to shape PNe, but this also points to the importance of jets in other types of binary systems and in other processes. These processes include the grazing envelope evolution (GEE), the common envelope evolution (CEE), and the efficient conversion of kinetic energy to radiation in outflows. Additionally, the jets point to the possibility that many systems launch jets as they enter the CEE, possibly through a GEE phase. The other binary systems in which jets might play significant roles include intermediate-luminosity optical transients (ILOTs), supernova impostors (including pre-explosion outbursts), post-CEE binary systems, post-GEE binary systems, and progenitors of neutron star binary systems and black hole binary systems. One of the immediate consequences is that the outflow of these systems is highly-non-spherical, including bipolar lobes, jets, and rings.

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