4.7 Article

The dark lane of the planetary nebula NGC 6302

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 359, Issue 1, Pages 383-400

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2005.08903.x

Keywords

dust, extinction; ISM : jets and outflows; planetary nebulae : individual : NGC 6302

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The butterfly-shaped planetary nebula, NGC 6302, shows a unique, dense equatorial dark lane, which is presumably a dusty disc, obscuring an unobserved, very hot central star. We trace the structure of this disc using Hubble Space Telescope H alpha and [N II] images, Very Large Telescope L- and M-band images at 0.4-arcsec resolution, including Bra and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) images, and a James Clerk Maxwell Telescope 450-mu m image. Extinction maps are derived from these images. Within the disc, the extinction is A(H alpha) = 5 - 7 mag and A(Br alpha) = 1 - 2 mag. The 450-mu m map shows a north - south elongated central core, tracing the massive dust disc, and extended emission from dust in the bipolar flows. A fit to the spectral energy distribution yields the disc dust mass of 0.03 M-.. The innermost region shows an ionized shell. The orientation of the polar axis shows a marked change between shell, disc and inner and outer outflow. The structures are well described by the warped-disc model of Icke ( 2003). PAH images are presented: PAH emission is found in the shell but avoids the disc. An infrared source is found close to the expected location of the central star.

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