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Hard X-ray Emission from Central Stars of Planetary Nebulae. Martín A. Guerrero Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía, IAA-CSIC, Spain. You -Hua Chu & Robert A. Gruendl University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign , USA. The X-ray Universe 2011 Berlin, June 29, 2011. Talk Outline.
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Hard X-ray Emission from Central Stars of Planetary Nebulae Martín A. Guerrero Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía, IAA-CSIC, Spain You-Hua Chu & Robert A. Gruendl Universityof Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA The X-ray Universe 2011 Berlin, June 29, 2011
Talk Outline X-ray emission expected from central stars of planetary nebulae (CSPNe) Photospheric X-ray emission. Coronal emission from a companion. Detection of unexpected hard X-ray emission from CSPNe Possible mechanisms for hard X-ray production: Pros and cons. Implications for PN formation and evolution. Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 2
PNe descend from low- and intermediate-mass stars: 0.8 M < Mi < 10 M 3
Photospheric X-ray Emission from Hot Central Stars Photospheric emission from hot (Teff > 100,000 K) CSPNe have high-energy tails that may extend into the X-ray domain. T. Rauch NLTE model Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 4
Photospheric X-ray Emission from Hot Central Stars Einstein,EXOSAT and ROSAT detections of soft X-rays: A 36, K 1-16, K 1-27, LoTr 5, NGC 246, NGC 1360, NGC 3587, NGC 4361, NGC 6853, NGC 7293 (de Korte et al. 1985; Tarafdar & Apparao 1988; Apparao & Tarafdar 1989; Kreysing et al. 1992; Rauch et al. 1994; Hoare et al. 1995) Search of the entire ROSAT archive for X-ray emission from PNe (Guerrero, Chu & Gruendl 2000) Point source (at the PSPC spatial resolution of 30”) Soft X-rays peaking below 0.2 keV (BB or photospheric models) Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 5
Photospheric X-ray Emission from Hot Central Stars Einstein,EXOSAT and ROSAT detections of soft X-rays: A 36, K 1-16, K 1-27, LoTr 5, NGC 246, NGC 1360, NGC 3587, NGC 4361, NGC 6853, NGC 7293 (de Korte et al. 1985; Tarafdar & Apparao 1988; Apparao & Tarafdar 1989; Kreysing et al. 1992; Rauch et al. 1994; Hoare et al. 1995) Search of the entire ROSAT archive for X-ray emission from PNe (Guerrero, Chu & Gruendl 2000) Ideal conditions for detection Small distance Low ISM extinction Nebulae and central stars at late evolutionary stage High Teff Low photospheric metal content Large and optically thin nebulae Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 6
[N II] NGC 2392 H X-rays 0.3-0.7 keV 0.7-1.5 keV 1.5-3.0 KeV X-rays [N II] H Unexpected Hard X-ray Emission at CSPNe [N II] NGC 6543 H X-rays NGC 6543 (Chu et al. 2001) kT1 = 0.1 keV, kT2 = 0.8 keV Lx = 1.0×1030 erg s-1 NGC 2392 (Guerrero et al. in prep.) kT = 2.8 keV Lx= 3.0×1030 erg s-1 Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 7
Does Hard X-ray Emission Implies a Companion? Coronal emission from a late type companion. Accretion: From a companion (as for quiescent novae or cataclysmic variables). From a debris disk. Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 8
GISW Density Gradient and Collimated Outflows The (Generalized) Interacting-Stellar Winds (G)ISW model of PN formation Symmetric AGB mass loss U Cam (Oloffson et al. 2010) U Cam Origin of the density gradient in the GISW model? Companion: preferential AGB mass loss @ equator Collimated outflows Accretion disk and launch of fast collimated outflows Effects on nebular morphology M 2-48 Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe
LoTr 5: When a galaxy group meets a PN Serendipitous Chandra and XMM-Newton observations (RX J1256.0+2556) X-rays peaking at ≈1 keV with secondary peak at ≈1.5 keV and high energy tail kT1=0.61 keV, kT2=3.1 keV Lx= 8.0 × 1030 ergs s-1 Notable X-ray variability (Montez et al. 2010; Guerrero et al., in prep.) XMM observations give similar spectral shape (kT1=0.6 keV, kT2=2.3 keV), but Lx = 2.2×1030 ergs s-1 and no clear variability 10
LoTr 5: a bipolar PN with a multiple central star Multiple system IN Comae including a G5 III star Rotation speed close to break-up velocity: vrot sin(i) ≈ 67 km s-1 Saturated coronal activity from a G5 III star: Lx/Lbol ≈ 10-3 LoTr 5 is an almost pole-on bipolar PNe (Graham et al. 2004) Bipolar axis and binary orbital plane are orthogonal Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 11
Two post-common envelope close binary CSPNe Montez et al. (2010) has detected X-ray emission from the O-type subdwarf + late-type companion CSPNe of HFG 1 and DS 1 kT ≈ 0.5 - 2.0 keV Lx≈ 1030 ergs s-1 Saturated coronal activity Lx/Lbol ≈ 10-3 DS 1 (Miszalski et al. 2009) Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 12
PNe with Collimated Outflows and Hard X-ray CSPNe NGC 2392 Mz 3 NGC 6543 NGC 6826 13
Late Type Stars Coronal Activity and Age In late type stars, Lx is related to rotation and declines with age !!! Lx≈ v2rot (Pallavicini et al. 1981) Lx≈ t-β 1.5 < β < 2.0 (Güedel et al. 1997) Mi=3M Mi=1.5M Enhanced X-ray emission (Lx/Lbol = 10-3 – 10-5.21): Massive PN progenitor for companions to stay active longer enough Evolution towards the PN phase sped up by the companion Angular momentum transfer from the PN progenitor to the companion Rotation of companion abnormally fast: LoTr 5 Giants in symbiotic stars rotate faster (Zamanov et al. 2006) Rapid-rotating companions of WDs: 2RE J0044+093, 2RE J0357+283 Tidal synchronization (close binaries), wind accretion (wide binaries) (Jeffries & Stevens 1996) F7-M4 can be spun up to P ≈ 3 days (Soker & Kastner 2002) 14
Hard X-ray Emission from the Helix Central Star ROSAT: Hard (> 0.5 keV) component (Leahy et al. 1994) - not a known binary system; spectrophotometric standard ! • not a powerful stellar wind to produce a hot bubble • Spatial coincidence? Background source? • Diffuse emission?
Chandra and XMM-Newton Observations of the Helix A point source at the central star X-ray emission peaking at 0.9 keV and decline of X-ray emission: kT1 = 0.65 keV, kT2 = 1.3 keV, Lx = (6.4 – 7.7)×1029 ergs s-1 (Guerrero et al. 2001) Serendipitous XMM-Newton observations: even lower Lx KT1 = 0.65 keV, KT2 = 1.3 keV, LX= 5.2×1029 ergs s-1 (Guerrero et al., in prep.) Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 16
Hard X-rays from the Helix CSPN: Not What You Expected Variability of stellar H and [N II]: possible evidence for dMe companion (Gruendl et al. 2001) Spitzer detection of a point source in all IRAC and MIPS bands up to 70 μm IRAC 3.6, 4.5, and 5.8 μm emission consistent with the CSPN Rayleigh-Jeans tail, but no sign of the dwarf companion! IRAC 8.0 μm and MIPS emission: cold, 100-130 K thin debris disk of dust distributed between 35-150 AU Disk origin: Collisions of Kuiper Belt-like objects, or to the breakup of comets from an Oort-like cloud? (Su et al. 2007) X-ray emission and H and [N II] variability product of intermittent accretion of material from the disk Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 17
Enigmatic Hard X-ray Emission from WDs Hard X-ray emission from PG 1159 and KPD 0005+5106 (O’Dwyer et al 2003; Chu et al 2004) Among the two hottest WDs PG 1159 is a pulsator -> no binary KPD 0005+5106 not a background source: O VIII lines (Werner et al. 1996) Chandra observations (Chu et al., in prep.) Very low metal content: - X-ray transparent atmospheres - tight constrain on accretion Very small fraction of single WDs shows hard X-rays (Bilíková et al. 2010) Leakage of the Wien high-energy tail from deep in the stellar atmosphere? Detailed ad-hoc NLTE models by T. Rauch at the Teff and with precise surface abundances have failed so far to reproduce it. 18
v ~ 1,100 km s-1 Shock-in Winds: OB and WR stars NGC 2392*, NGC 6543 and NGC 6826 also have fast stellar winds DACs (Discrete Absorption Components) moving outwards in the wind of NGC 6543 with ~0.17 days modulation (Prinja et al. 2007) Variability of the P Cygni profiles of high-excitation UV lines in NGC 2392 and NGC 6826 similar to those seen in OB stars (Guerrero & De Marco, in prep.) Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 19
Shock-in Winds: OB and WR stars Instabilities of the driving mechanism of the stellar wind can lead to shocks in the wind of single O, early B, and WR stars. (Lucy & White 1980; Gayley & Owocki 1995) Lx = 1031 – 1033 ergs s-1 Tx ≈ a few 106 K (kT = 0.2-0.5 keV) log Lx/Lbol = -6.912 ± 0.153 log LX = 0.574×log Lw + 11.45 (Sana et al. 2006) Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 20
Shock-in Winds: OB and WR stars The fast stellar winds of NGC 2392*, NGC 6543, and NGC 6826 WR stars: Lw ≈ 1037-1038 ergs s-1 CSPNe: Lw ≈ 1032-1034 ergs s-1 NGC 6543 and NGC 6826 have lower Lx/Lw: log Lx/Lw = -4.1 – -4.9 OB stars log Lx/Lw = -2.5 – -3.1 NGC 2392: kTshock = (3/16) m v2 v∞ = 420 km s-1 kT = 1.3 [v/1,000 km s-1]2 keV = 0.23 keV !! Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 21
Other Possible Origins of the Hard X-ray Emission Accretion: From a companion (quiescent novae or cataclysmic variables). From a debris disk. CVs and quiescent recurrent novae have large optical/IR/UV and X-ray variability. Accretion is inhibited by fast stellar winds: dMac/dT > 10-5 M yr-1 Stellar winds: Interacting winds (WR+OB binary systems or symbiotic stars). Orbital radius dependence, but basically noticeable wind and unseen companion -> <- Wind ablation of a stellar or sub-stellar companion. Orbital radius changes with stellar evolution: the lower the mass of the companion, the stronger dependence Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 22
Possible Origins of the Hard X-ray Emission CSPN Coronal Wind WD Accretion shock-in colliding ablation companion dust LoTr 5 ✓ ✗ ✗ ✗ ✓ ✗ ✗ Mz 3 ✓ ? ? ? ✗ ✗ ✗ NGC 2392 ✓ ✗ ✗ ? ✗ ✗ ✗ NGC 6543 ✓ ✓ ✓wb ✓cb ✗ ✗ ✗ NGC 6826 ✓ ✓ ✓wb ✓cb ✗ ✗ ✗ NGC 7293 ✗ ✗ ✗ ✗ ✓ ✗ ✓ DS 1 ✓ HFG 1 ✓ Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 23
Conclusions Coronal emission from a late-type companion Enhanced coronal activity and rotation late in the star life Shock-in winds as in OB stars Scaled down versions of OB winds: Lx/Lbol, Lx/Lw Wind variability Other wind interactions Dwarf stellar (no sub-stellar or giant planet) companion Leaking from underneath the atmosphere as in hot WDs Unlikely due to “relatively” low Teff and surface abundances Accretion Not a viable mechanism in general Accretion from a debris disk as a last resource to explain Helix CSPN X-ray emission: abundances, variability Martín A. Guerrero, Hard X-ray Emission from CSPNe 24