Galaxies (Jul 2018)

Planetary Nebulae Embryo after a Common Envelope Event

  • Natalia Ivanova,
  • Jose L. A. Nandez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/galaxies6030075
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
p. 75

Abstract

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In the centers of some planetary nebulae are found close binary stars. The formation of those planetary nebulae was likely through a common envelope event, which transformed an initially-wide progenitor binary into the currently observed close binary, while stripping the outer layers away. A common envelope event proceeds through several qualitatively different stages, each of which ejects matter at its own characteristic speed, and with a different degree of symmetry. Here, we present how typical post-common envelope ejecta looks kinematically a few years after the start of a common envelope event. We also show some asymmetric features we have detected in our simulations (jet-like structures, lobes, and hemispheres).

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