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arxiv: 1009.3284 · v1 · pith:75KFQ2F5new · submitted 2010-09-16 · 🌌 astro-ph.GA · astro-ph.SR

Faraday Rotation in the Tail of the Planetary Nebula DeHt 5

classification 🌌 astro-ph.GA astro-ph.SR
keywords taildehtinnerestimateinteractionapproximatelyaroundduring
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We present 1420 MHz polarization images of a 5x5 degree region around the planetary nebula (PN) DeHt 5. The images reveal narrow Faraday-rotation structures on the visible disk of DeHt 5, as well as two wider, tail-like, structures "behind" DeHt 5. Though DeHt 5 is an old PN known to be interacting with the interstellar medium (ISM), a tail has not previously been identified for this object. The innermost tail is approximately 3 pc long and runs away from the north-east edge of DeHt 5 in a direction roughly opposite that of the sky-projected space velocity of the white dwarf central star, WD 2218+706. We believe this tail to be the signature of ionized material ram-pressure stripped and deposited downstream during a >74,000 yr interaction between DeHt 5 and the ISM. We estimate the rotation measure (RM) through the inner tail to be -15 +/- 5 rad/m^2, and, using a realistic estimate for the line-of-sight component of the ISM magnetic field around DeHt 5, derive an electron density in the inner tail of n_e = 3.6 +/- 1.8 cm^-3. Assuming the material is fully ionized, we estimate a total mass in the inner tail of 0.68 +/- 0.33 solar masses, and predict that 0.49 +/- 0.33 solar masses was added during the PN-ISM interaction. The outermost tail consists of a series of three roughly circular components, which have a collective length of approximately 11.0 pc. This tail is less conspicuous than the inner tail, and may be the signature of the earlier interaction between the WD 2218+706 asymptotic giant branch (AGB) progenitor and the ISM. The results for the inner and outer tails are consistent with hydrodynamic simulations, and may have implications for the PN missing-mass problem as well as for models which describe the impact of the deaths of intermediate-mass stars on the ISM.

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